BOOKS: Never: Ken Follett

In the opening of his latest novel, “Never,” Ken Follett notes that, while researching “Fall of Giants,” the first book in his massive 20th century trilogy, he was shocked to discover World War I was the “war that nobody wanted.” 

Leaders, populations and nations didn’t want it to happen but, step by step, Europe then the world teetered toward war then discovered too late that they were all mired in one of history’s bloodiest conflicts.

“I came to believe that it was all a tragic accident,” Follett writes. “And I wondered, could that happen again?”

Follett’s frightening musings are the basis for “Never,” a novel about the U.S., China, North and South Korea and the Middle East teetering toward nuclear war.

As he has in past novels, Follett creates personable characters to carry his plot forward. Readers meet America’s first female president; two intelligence officers who fall in love though they represent different nations; an undercover American agent in the Middle East; a Chinese intelligence officer who is the son of an even higher ranking officer in the Chinese government.

Each one of these characters must deal with personal dilemmas and office/government politics as well as the international politics that begins burying them in an escalating series of violent incidents.

As the fictional President Pauline Green says in the book and in the cover blurb, “Every catastrophe begins with a little problem that doesn’t get fixed.”

Through these characters, Follett unfolds his suspenseful plot of possible nuclear armageddon that feels all too real.

Given Follett’s penchant for writing massive, epic historical fiction – “The Pillars of the Earth” and its sequels; “Fall of Giants” and its two sequels, he keeps readers guessing right up until the end of “Never’s” 800 pages if it will end in this one volume.

Not to be a spoilsport, readers will have to open “Never” for themselves to find out. As with past Follett books, the pages fly by. The suspense lasts until the last sentence.

News

Rally to raise money for accident victims

News

Hospital Authority requests rezoning for new apartment complex construction

News

Georgia Department of Public Safety partnering with ICE

News

Local Olympian gold-medalists to be honored with parade

News

Growing frustration with smartphones could lead to statewide ban in Georgia schools

Breaking News

Severe weather forecast for
late Saturday, early Sunday

News

Summer Camp Connections
will preview summer activities

News

GBI seeks expansion of subpoena powers

News

Hughes and Spence win gold at Special Olympics Winter Games

News

Johnson presents program
at Retired Educators meeting

News

School launches fourth leadership development program cohort

News

Legislature considers alternative path for corpses

News

Moultrie and Doerun residents express concerns over
utility bills at meeting

News

Chamber of Commerce holds 115th annual banquet

News

Marshall elected gifted organization president

News

Ga. Peanut Commission celebrates National Peanut Month

News

Ten arrests made on outstanding warrants

News

Marijuana inspires debate in Georgia Senate, with three bills passing before the deadline

News

State Senate beats deadline to send school safety measures to House

News

Martin receives Southeast Mentor of the Year award
from education council

News

CCHS Health Science Pathway earns Industry Certification

News

UGA student visits Moultrie
to collaborate on park design

News

PCOM student physician receives scholarship

Columns

EDDIE SEAGLE: More on portable plants in the landscape