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Never: A Novel Kindle Edition
The new must-read epic from master storyteller Ken Follett: more than a thriller, it’s an action-packed, globe-spanning drama set in the present day.
“A compelling story, and only too realistic.” —Lawrence H. Summers, former U.S. Treasury Secretary
“Every catastrophe begins with a little problem that doesn’t get fixed.” So says Pauline Green, president of the United States, in Follett’s nerve-racking drama of international tension.
A shrinking oasis in the Sahara Desert; a stolen US Army drone; an uninhabited Japanese island; and one country’s secret stash of deadly chemical poisons: all these play roles in a relentlessly escalating crisis.
Struggling to prevent the outbreak of world war are a young woman intelligence officer; a spy working undercover with jihadists; a brilliant Chinese spymaster; and Pauline herself, beleaguered by a populist rival for the next president election.
Never is an extraordinary novel, full of heroines and villains, false prophets and elite warriors, jaded politicians and opportunistic revolutionaries. It brims with cautionary wisdom for our times, and delivers a visceral, heart-pounding read that transports readers to the brink of the unimaginable.
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From the Publisher




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EYE OF THE NEEDLE
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JACKDAWS
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CODE TO ZERO
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HORNET FLIGHT
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Customer Reviews |
4.6 out of 5 stars 28,541
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4.5 out of 5 stars 16,133
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4.3 out of 5 stars 16,175
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4.4 out of 5 stars 14,544
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Price | $14.24$14.24 | $13.53$13.53 | $17.00$17.00 | $10.79$10.79 |
Editorial Reviews
Review
—The Washington Post
"Ken Follett can't write a bad book, and Never is his best. It's terrifying. I defy anyone to put it down once the last 150 pages are reached."
—Stephen King
"Superstar novelist Ken Follett’s what-if political thriller . . . is so exciting—and so plausible—you won’t want to look away."
—Apple Books (Best Book of the Month)
"Settle in for a thrilling ride."
—CNN.com
"Terrific . . . A powerful, commanding performance from one of the top writers in the genre."
—Publishers Weekly (starred)
"A complex, scary thriller that feels too plausible for comfort. You’ll be so absorbed in the story threads that you’ll follow them anywhere—and you’ll suddenly realize you’ve read hundreds of pages. . . . On one level, it’s great entertainment; on another, a window into a sobering possibility."
—Kirkus (starred)
"Absolutely compelling . . . A smart, scary, and all-too-plausible thriller."
—Booklist
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Chapter 1
Seen from a plane, the car would have looked like a slow beetle creeping across an endless beach, the sun glinting off its polished black armor. In fact it was doing thirty miles per hour, the maximum safe speed on a road that had unexpected potholes and cracks. No one wanted to get a flat tire in the Sahara Desert.
The road led north from N'Djamena, capital city of Chad, through the desert toward Lake Chad, the biggest oasis in the Sahara. The landscape was a long, flat vista of sand and rock with a few pale yellow dried-up bushes and a random scatter of large and small stones, everything the same shade of mid-tan, as bleak as a moonscape.
The desert was unnervingly like outer space, Tamara Levit thought, with the car as a rocket ship. If anything went wrong with her space suit she could die. The comparison was fanciful and made her smile. All the same she glanced into the back of the car, where there were two reassuringly large plastic demijohns of water, enough to keep them all alive in an emergency until help arrived, probably.
The car was American. It was designed for difficult terrain, with high clearance and low gearing. It had tinted windows, and Tamara was wearing sunglasses, but even so the light glared off the concrete road and hurt her eyes.
All four people in the car wore shades. The driver, Ali, was a local man, born and raised here in Chad. In the city he wore blue jeans and a T-shirt, but today he had on a floor-length robe called a galabiya, with a loose cotton scarf wound around his head, traditional clothing for protection from the merciless sun.
Next to Ali in the front was an American soldier, Corporal Peter Ackerman. The rifle held loosely across his knees was a US Army standard-issue short-barreled lightweight carbine. He was about twenty years old, one of those young men who seemed to overflow with chirpy friendliness. To Tamara, who was almost thirty, he seemed ridiculously young to be carrying a lethal weapon. But he had no lack of confidence-one time he had even had the cheek to ask her for a date. "I like you, Pete, but you're much too young for me," she had said.
Beside Tamara in the rear seat was Tabdar "Tab" Sadoul, an attachŽ at the European Union mission in N'Djamena. Tab's glossy mid-brown hair was fashionably long, but otherwise he looked like an off-duty business executive, in khakis and a sky-blue button-down shirt, the sleeves rolled to show brown wrists.
She was attached to the American embassy in N'Djamena, and she wore her regular working clothes, a long-sleeved dress over trousers, with her dark hair tucked into a headscarf. It was a practical outfit that offended no one, and with her brown eyes and olive skin she did not even look like a foreigner. In a high-crime country such as Chad it was safer not to stand out, especially for a woman.
She was keeping an eye on the odometer. They had been on the road a couple of hours but now they were close to their destination. Tamara was tense about the meeting ahead. A lot hung on it, including her own career.
"Our cover story is a fact-finding mission," she said. "Do you know much about the lake?"
"Enough, I think," Tab said. "The Chari River rises in central Africa, runs eight hundred and seventy miles, and stops here. Lake Chad sustains several million people in four countries: Niger, Nigeria, Cameroon, and Chad. They're small farmers, graziers, and fishermen. Their favorite fish is the Nile perch, which can grow to six feet long and four hundred pounds."
Frenchmen speaking English always sounded as if they were trying to get you into bed, Tamara thought. Perhaps they always were. She said: "I guess they don't catch many Nile perch now that the water is so shallow."
"You're right. And the lake used to cover ten thousand square miles, but now it's only about five hundred. A lot of these people are on the edge of starvation."
"What do you think of the Chinese plan?"
"A canal one thousand five hundred miles long, bringing water from the river Congo? Chad's president is keen on it, not surprisingly. It might even happen-the Chinese do amazing things-but it won't be cheap, and it won't be soon."
China's investments in Africa were regarded, by Tamara's bosses in Washington and Tab's in Paris, with the same mixture of awestruck admiration and deep mistrust. Beijing spent billions, and got things done, but what were they really after?
Out of the corner of her eye Tamara saw a flash in the distance, a gleam as of sunlight on water. "Are we approaching the lake?" she asked Tab. "Or was that a mirage?"
"We must be close," he said.
"Look out for a turning on the left," she said to Ali, and then she repeated it in Arabic. Both Tamara and Tab were fluent in Arabic and French, the two main languages of Chad.
"Le voilˆ," Ali replied in French. Here it is.
The car slowed as it approached a junction marked only by a pile of stones.
They turned off the road onto a track across gravelly sand. In places it was hard to distinguish the track from the desert around it, but Ali seemed confident. In the distance Tamara glimpsed patches of green, smudged by heat haze, presumably trees and bushes growing by the water.
Beside the road Tamara saw the skeleton of a long-dead Peugeot pickup truck, a rusting body with no wheels or windows, and soon there were other signs of human habitation: a camel tied to a bush, a mongrel dog with a rat in its mouth, and a scatter of beer cans, bald tires, and ripped polythene.
They passed a vegetable patch, plants in neat straight lines being irrigated by a man with a watering can, then they came to a village, fifty or sixty houses spread randomly, with no pattern of streets. Most of the dwellings were traditional one-room huts, with circular mud-brick walls and tall pointed roofs of palm leaves. Ali drove at walking pace, threading the car between the houses, avoiding barefoot children and horned goats and outdoor cooking fires.
He stopped the car and said: "Nous sommes arrives." We have arrived.
Tamara said: "Pete, would you please put the carbine on the floor? We want to look like students of ecology."
"Sure thing, Ms. Levit." He put the gun by his feet, with its stock hidden under his seat.
Tab said: "This used to be a prosperous fishing village, but look how far away the water is now-a mile, at least."
The settlement was heartbreakingly poor, the poorest place Tamara had ever seen. It bordered a long, flat beach that had presumably been underwater once. Windmills that had pumped water to the fields now stood far from the lake, derelict, their sails turning pointlessly. A herd of skinny sheep grazed a patch of scrub, watched by a little girl with a stick in her hand. Tamara could see the lake glittering in the distance. Raffia palms and moshi bushes grew on the near shore. Low islets dotted the lake. Tamara knew that the larger islands served as hideouts for the terrorist gangs who plagued the inhabitants, stealing what little they had and beating any who tried to stop them. People who were already impoverished were made absolutely destitute.
Tab said: "What are those people doing in the lake, do you know?"
There were half a dozen women standing in the shallows, scooping the surface with bowls, and Tamara knew the answer to Tab's question. "They're skimming edible algae from the surface. We call it spirulina but their word is dihŽ. They filter it, then dry it in the sun."
"Have you tried it?"
She nodded. "It tastes awful but apparently it's nutritious. You can buy it in health food shops."
"I've never heard of it. It doesn't sound like the kind of thing that appeals to the French palate."
"You know it." Tamara opened the door and stepped out. Away from the car's air-conditioning, the atmosphere struck her like a burn. She pulled her scarf forward on her head to shade her face. Then she took a photo of the beach with her phone.
Tab got out of the car, putting a wide-brimmed straw hat on his head, and stood beside her. The hat did not suit him-in fact it looked a bit comical-but he did not seem to care. He was well-dressed but not vain. She liked that.
They both studied the village. Among the houses were cultivated plots striped with irrigation channels. The water had to be brought a long way, Tamara realized, and she felt depressingly sure that it was the women who carried it. A man in a galabiya seemed to be selling cigarettes, chatting amiably with the men, flirting a little with the women. Tamara recognized the white packet with the gold-colored sphinx head: it identified an Egyptian brand called Cleopatra, the most popular in Africa. The cigarettes were probably smuggled or stolen. Several motorcycles and motor scooters were parked outside the houses, and one very old Volkswagen Beetle. In this country the motorcycle was the most popular form of personal transport. Tamara took more pictures.
Perspiration trickled down her sides under her clothes. She wiped her forehead with the end of her cotton headscarf. Tab took out a red handkerchief with white spots and mopped under the collar of his button-down.
"Half these houses are unoccupied," Tab said.
Tamara looked more closely and saw that some of the buildings were decaying. There were holes in the palm-leaf roofs and some of the mud bricks were crumbling away.
"Huge numbers of people have left the area," Tab said. "I guess everyone who has somewhere to go has gone. But there are millions left behind. This whole place is a disaster area."
"And it's not just here, is it?" said Tamara. "This process, desertification at the southern edge of the Sahara, is happening all across Africa, from the Red Sea to the Atlantic Ocean."
"In French we call that region le Sahel."
"Same word in English, the Sahel." She glanced back at the car. Its engine was still turning over. "I guess Ali and Pete are going to stay in the air-conditioning."
"If they have any sense." Tab looked worried. "I don't see our man."
Tamara was worried, too. He could have been dead. But she spoke calmly. "Our instructions are that he will find us. Meanwhile we have to stay in character, so let's dip and look around."
"What?"
"Let's go and look around."
"But what did you say before? Dip?"
"Sorry. I guess it's Chicago slang."
"Now I could be the only French person who knows that expression." He grinned. "But first we should pay a courtesy call on the village elders."
"Why don't you do that? They never take any notice of a woman anyway."
"Sure."
Tab went off and Tamara walked around, trying to remain unflustered, taking pictures and talking to people in Arabic. Most villagers either cultivated a small piece of arid land or had a few sheep or a cow. One woman specialized in mending nets, but there were few fishermen left; a man owned a furnace and made pots, but not many people had any money to buy them. Everyone was more or less desperate.
A ramshackle structure of four posts holding up a network of twigs served as a clothes dryer, and a young woman was pinning up laundry, watched by a boy of about two. Her clothes were the vivid shades of orange and yellow that the people of Chad loved. She hung up her last item, put the child on her hip, then spoke to Tamara in careful schoolgirl French with a strong Arabic accent and invited her into her house.
The woman's name was Kiah, her son was Naji, and she was a widow, she said. She looked about twenty. She was strikingly beautiful, with black eyebrows and bold cheekbones and a curved Saracen nose, and the look in her dark eyes suggested determination and strength. She could be interesting, Tamara thought.
She followed Kiah through the low arched doorway, taking off her shades as she moved from the glare of the sun into deep shadow. The inside of the hut was dim and close and scented. Tamara felt a heavy rug under her feet and smelled cinnamon and turmeric. As her eyes adjusted she saw low tables, a couple of baskets for storage, and cushions on the floor, but nothing she recognized as regular furniture, no chairs or cupboards. To one side were two canvas palliasses for beds and a neat pile of thick wool blankets, brightly striped in red and blue, for the cold desert nights.
Most Americans would see this as a desperately poor home, but Tamara knew that it was not only comfortable but a touch more affluent than the average. Kiah looked proud as she offered a bottle of local beer called Gala that she had cooling in a bowl of water. Tamara thought it would be polite to accept hospitality-and anyway she was thirsty.
A picture of the Virgin Mary in a cheap frame on the wall indicated that Kiah was Christian, as were some 40 percent of the people of Chad. Tamara said: "You went to a school run by nuns, I suppose. That's how you learned French."
"Yes."
"You speak it very well." This was not really true, but Tamara was being nice.
Kiah invited her to sit on the rug. Before doing so, Tamara went back to the door and glanced out nervously, screwing up her eyes against the sudden brightness. She looked toward the car. The cigarette vendor was bending down by the driver's-side window with a carton of Cleopatras in his hand. She saw Ali behind the window, his scarf wound around his head, making a contemptuous flicking-away gesture with his fingers, evidently not wanting to buy cheap cigarettes. Then the vendor said something that altered Ali's attitude dramatically. Ali jumped out of the car, looking apologetic, and opened the rear door. The vendor got into the car and Ali quickly closed the door.
So that's him, Tamara thought. Well, the disguise is certainly effective. It fooled me.
She was relieved. At least he was still alive.
She looked around. No one in the village had taken any notice of the vendor's getting into the car. He was now out of sight, hidden by the tinted windows.
Tamara nodded with satisfaction and went back inside Kiah's house.
Kiah asked her: "Is it true that all white women have seven dresses and a maid to wash a different one every day?"
Product details
- ASIN : B08WCFQVR8
- Publisher : Penguin Books (November 9, 2021)
- Publication date : November 9, 2021
- Language : English
- File size : 3.5 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 813 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #23,210 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #118 in Political Thrillers & Suspense
- #161 in Military Thrillers (Books)
- #176 in Military Thrillers (Kindle Store)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Ken Follett was only twenty-seven when he wrote the award-winning EYE OF THE NEEDLE, which became an international bestseller. His celebrated PILLARS OF THE EARTH was voted into the top 100 of Britain's best-loved books in the BBC's the Big Read and the sequel, WORLD WITHOUT END, was published to critical acclaim. He lives with his family in London and Hertfordshire.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers praise the writing quality and research. They find the story intriguing and well-written, with a gripping plot that keeps them interested. However, opinions differ on the readability, character development, and scariness level. Some readers find the characters well-developed and likable, while others find them hollow or hard to keep track of.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the writing quality of the book engaging and easy to follow. They describe the story as visually appealing, with many plot twists and turns. Readers praise the author's storytelling abilities and consider the book a top-notch novel that immerses them in the realm of nuclear war.
"...Follett is a "visual" writer. He skillfully paints the characters and communities in his books, making them very hard to forget...." Read more
"Engaging and well written. Roughly 5 intertwined plot lines that all flowed well...." Read more
"Captivating and excellent research and well written. This book has my highest recommendation. Sad ending but maybe realistic in this age." Read more
"Anything by Ken Follett is almost guaranteed to be well written and very readable...." Read more
Customers find the book well-researched and informative. They appreciate the author's grasp of theoretical outcomes and his ability to research his subject in detail. The storyteller is excellent at telling many different perspectives at once, using real facts and objective storytelling. The book adds lots of incidentals that improve the narrative and keeps readers engaged. Overall, it's a great read and important.
"Captivating and excellent research and well written. This book has my highest recommendation. Sad ending but maybe realistic in this age." Read more
"...Follett does a great job with the details, making the whole scenario feel pretty realistic, which amps up the suspense...." Read more
"I like how Ken researched this book. It's intriguing and keeps you interested. Certainly seems like something that could happen." Read more
"...author’s history lessons, and believe he performs detailed and thorough research for his works with which he uses the novel as a teaching medium...." Read more
Customers have different views on the story. Some find it suspenseful and well-written, with propulsive plots. Others feel the ending is disappointing and scary, with unrelated storylines convergent in an unsatisfactory way.
"...The story line is full of tension and suspense, each battle could push the world powers into destroying sections of every country...." Read more
"Engaging and well written. Roughly 5 intertwined plot lines that all flowed well...." Read more
"...the main characters (there are several main characters) dead-end in an unsatisfactory way, and some of the seemingly “main” characters interact with..." Read more
"Captivating and excellent research and well written. This book has my highest recommendation. Sad ending but maybe realistic in this age." Read more
Customers have different views on the book's readability. Some find it riveting with interesting subplots and engaging writing style. They consider it a great book in the Follett tradition, while others feel the style is dull, the research is not well-done, and the ending is realistic but not very fulfilling.
"...paints the characters and communities in his books, making them very hard to forget...." Read more
"Engaging and well written. Roughly 5 intertwined plot lines that all flowed well...." Read more
"...Then there is the writing style which is dull and often is just really bad. The women were dressed in lingerie so they must be the prostitutes...." Read more
"This book is AMAZING!..." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the character development. Some find the characters and situations believable, with the same types of heroes and villains as in the previous books. The book features a diverse cast, including President Pauline Green of the U.S. However, others feel the character development lacks depth and is non-existent.
"...The story follows different characters like a U.S. president, a CIA operative, and an intelligence officer, all trying to make the right choices in..." Read more
"...Other problems with this book include an entirely forgettable cast of characters - all one dimensional national stereotypes with little depth except..." Read more
"...The characters all are very genuine and as you read, you will root for them, their safety and happiness...." Read more
"...and like the previous Kingsbridge books, it has the same types of heroes and villains that are featured in the first three books, to the point..." Read more
Customers have mixed views on the book's scariness level. Some find it frightening and a cautionary tale, with a tension-filled conclusion. Others feel it's too realistic and preachy about the downsides of nuclear war.
"...Never” is a cautionary tale about the power of unintended consequences, and it is disturbing and illuminating in equal measure...." Read more
"...and we end up with a very long but rather intriguing, and somewhat frightening detail of where the future may lie." Read more
"...While the novel aims for global scope and tension, its portrayal of international politics feels contrived, relying on familiar Western narratives..." Read more
"...historical fiction, this story is one at least potentially of realistic horror. No spoilers here, but a can’t put it down thriller." Read more
Customers have different views on the book's pacing. Some find it fast-paced and exciting, with suspense moving quickly and simultaneously from three separate hot spots. Others feel the pacing is slow and uneven, with sections of dense exposition that disrupt the narrative.
"...Even though some parts drag a bit and the political stuff might feel heavy, the story is still gripping and makes you think about how easily things..." Read more
"...The novel flowed flawlessly from one realm to another, I always knew where I was and what was happening, and I was always invested in what was going..." Read more
"...However, the pacing is uneven, with slower sections of dense exposition that disrupt the narrative momentum...." Read more
"...It starts off well enough: a President’s tour of the bunker she’ll use in the event of Armageddon; a CIA undercover operative investigating Chinese..." Read more
Customers have different views on the political slant of the book. Some find it interesting to see some possibilities of world politics and examine the human element behind them. They appreciate the information about international diplomacy and national defense tactics. However, others feel the book oversimplifies world politics and makes some world leaders too likeable. Some also mention that parts drag and the political stuff feels heavy, while the story is still gripping.
"...I thought he oversimplified world politics and made some world leaders too like a cardboard cutout." Read more
"...of nuclear war at a moments notice it is full of interesting information about international affairs. I didn’t want it to end." Read more
"...Even though some parts drag a bit and the political stuff might feel heavy, the story is still gripping and makes you think about how easily things..." Read more
"...The main plot is just silly. It demonstrates a total ignorance of diplomacy, government policy, human psychology, military operations, weapons..." Read more
Reviews with images

Terrifying and Plausible
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on March 22, 2024Ken Follett is one of the most prolific authors of over arcing series that I consider "must reads". He also has a significant number of stand alone stories that should come stamped with "BINGE READ" on the cover. His books cover so many differing eras and the series span huge pieces of history in many countries with immigrant history featuring in many of them. Follett is a "visual" writer. He skillfully paints the characters and communities in his books, making them very hard to forget. He does tend to pack alot of story into each of his books, this one is a little over 800 pages.
In the multinational thriller, NEVER, Follett splits the story into three world views as they work to stop those who would see a WWIII launch using nuclear weapons. As these three groups work their seperate goals, readers get a glimpse of prevailing politics as they set policy to aggravate the other parties instead of focusing on the immediate threat. The story line is full of tension and suspense, each battle could push the world powers into destroying sections of every country. This was an easy 5 star read, but then, Follett books usually are.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 24, 2025Engaging and well written. Roughly 5 intertwined plot lines that all flowed well. I thought he oversimplified world politics and made some world leaders too like a cardboard cutout.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 25, 2024Captivating and excellent research and well written. This book has my highest recommendation. Sad ending but maybe realistic in this age.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 16, 2024Anything by Ken Follett is almost guaranteed to be well written and very readable. This book is that, but doesn't live up to his normal standards otherwise. Follett excels at historical fiction, particularly anything taking place during WWII or older. This book revolves around a number of characters involved in increasing tensions between the US and China potentially leading to nuclear war. I found much of the plot unrealistic. Some of that was probably to make the plot work (e.g., a weak Chinese leader that bears no resemblance to dictator-for-live Xi Jinping), but some of it was unnecessary (e.g., some of the author's biases regarding diplomacy, civil-military interaction, etc. shine through). Bottom line, you probably won't regret reading this book, but don't expect it to be at the level of the Knightsbridge series or the Century Trilogy.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 20, 2024This book is AMAZING! Never is a political thriller that really dives into how a bunch of seemingly random events can escalate into something huge and dangerous on a global scale. The story follows different characters like a U.S. president, a CIA operative, and an intelligence officer, all trying to make the right choices in a super tense situation. Follett does a great job with the details, making the whole scenario feel pretty realistic, which amps up the suspense. Even though some parts drag a bit and the political stuff might feel heavy, the story is still gripping and makes you think about how easily things can go wrong in our interconnected world. If you're into thrillers that mix action with real-world issues, Never is definitely worth checking out.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 6, 2025The book began in Munchkin Country, a fictitious anti nuclear bunker where the US President and high ranking officials would retreat to if there was ever a nuclear war. It was purely a tour of the facility to acquaint President Pauline Green with what to do in an emergency.
The scene then shifts to Chad in Africa and CIA efforts to defeat the Jihadists who operated in that region of Africa. Tamara Levit who was attached to the American Embassy liaised with CIA agent Abdul John Haddad, who was working on the drug smuggling trade of the jihadist group called ISGS. There was also the involvement of China and Nth Korea in these African nations.
Then we meet Chang Kai, vice minister for international intelligence, in charge of the overseas half of China’s intelligence operation (spy headquarters). His close contacts included fellow spy’s from USA and Nth Korea. They keep each other informed of going’s on in their respective countries.
So where does all this intrigue and espionage lead the reader. Was the world a stable place? How much trust did the so called super powers have in each other? What sort of events could possible trigger warfare? Is the world headed down a rabbit hole?
The author gives quite a graphic idea of how volatile our world political situation can be and what triggers can possible cause another disastrous war. Throw in a couple of love interests to make our minds wander and we end up with a very long but rather intriguing, and somewhat frightening detail of where the future may lie.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 27, 2025Follett is always so good. Once you open his work and start reading nothing else matters. You cannot stop reading.
Top reviews from other countries
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Excelente romance. Tema atual (combate ao terrorismo), bem tratado e com dose certa de suspense.Reviewed in Brazil on December 21, 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Novel
Personagens reais agindo de acordo com as suas características. Nenhum super-herói ou milagre. As histórias (quatro núcleos) prendem a atenção e o leitor não consegue parar. E, quando interrompe a leitura, quer voltar à história. Tomara que haja uma continuação.
- Alex RReviewed in Mexico on September 26, 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing
Best novel written by Follet. No more comments needed.
- Dr. Tim ParkerReviewed in Canada on February 13, 2022
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent story, engaging writing; a Follet classic
This is a truly engaging novel, with several plots going at the same time, centered around escalation of worldwide events. Follet is a master novelist, and it's clear with this book's writing, which draws you in, caring about the people he writes about, and while this is a long novel, you simply have to read it to the end. The subject may be unnerving for some, dealing as it does with war, but it presents a perfect picture of why things escalate and the people who are both directly and indirectly involved. Some will find the ending bothers them, others may find it a bit abrupt, but it is an integral part of the story. A masterpiece of a novel!
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MarcorelliReviewed in Italy on February 15, 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars Una storia molto realistica
Scritto in tempo di pace, ha anticipato l'orrore di ciò che stiamo vivendo
- Karina MurphyReviewed in the United Arab Emirates on October 17, 2024
4.0 out of 5 stars Spy thriller, anyone?
I really have mixed feelings about this book. Spy-action thrillers are always a blast even on movies especially when it’s Robert Ludlum, Tom Clancy, and Ken Follett . So I was excited, hyped-up, and engaged from page 1 of Never. My interest, however, did a nosedive, halfway through the 816 pages.
What I 🩷:
🦋That all the characters are given a chance to tell their stories by highlighting their storylines in every chapter. I love the stories of Abdul, Kiah, and Chang Kai
🎭The complex storylines interweaving threads of espionage, political intrigue, and high-stakes missions
💣The intense action and the suspenseful moments, unexpected twists, and constant danger
⏳No boring and confusing flashbacks, instead, each chapter relay a continuous flow of events
🎢Each page felt like a roller coaster ride of espionage and action. Getting a glimpse of what happens in the Situation Room when war breaks out is a real knocker!
🌎The global settings exploring different countries, cultures transported me to the desert, to a war zone, to the famous kpop crib
🔪The highlights on geographical and historical stories of the Superpowers, Asia, and African countries plus the inside knowledge shared on political strategies and maneuverings. It’s unbelievably true how people can sell their dignity and soul for their own political agenda and personal gain.
Why NOT 5⭐️:
- As the story progresses, it becomes slow-paced and repetitive, and there are moments where the story seems to be a drag 😑
- The love story of Green is cringy and shouldn’t have given pages of emphasis. Not interesting at all! Tamara and Tab are cute though 👩❤️👨
- The story in Africa took half of the book then abruptly ended to be replaced by issues in Asia, then suddenly there’s a chapter to close Abdul’s story. There was no continuity along this area. 😵
- Im not sure if it’s just me or there is really NO major plot twist. If there is, I didn’t feel it. The conspiracy angle between the Chinese isn’t enough for a twist. 🧬
- The ending is MEH! Not the hanging ending, that’s fine. But I didn’t get closure on the global war and Kai’s future.