Assault on Westminster

A Susan Dax Adventure

by Stevenson Mukoro


Formats

Softcover
$23.28
E-Book
$2.99
Softcover
$23.28

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 11/28/2016

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 230
ISBN : 9781524595920
Format : E-Book
Dimensions : N/A
Page Count : 230
ISBN : 9781524595913

About the Book

There is a masterful strategist with a foolproof technique for causing mayhem at work on London’s street. Unless the newly elected government meet his demand of one hundred million pounds, he will launch a deadly attack on the British parliament. To prove the legitimacy of the threat, a mysterious assassin murders a deputy minister and a minister. When the MI6 investigates the threat, another minister is garrotted. Enter Susan Dax, the beautiful billionairess with lethal fighting skills. She is encouraged to poke around and discovers that she is facing a most ingenious adversary, she has confronted in a long time. Susan gets into a brawl on an Algerian waterfront, led on a wild goose chase across England, tortured by a beautiful North Korean operative, and finally, deceived by a lover. Her only ally against the pursuit of the kill-crazed assassin and mastermind is a handsome MI6 agent who harbours an ulterior motive against their common foes.


About the Author

Stevenson Mukoro was born in Lewisham, London, on June 26 and grew up in the middle-class suburb of Ughelli. He is the son of Samuel and Rose Mukoro. He has two older siblings, Macdonald and Regina, and two younger siblings, Tina and Kingsley. From an early age, he wanted to be a professional pilot because he often envisioned the beauty of the world from the air. In high school, however, he developed two other passions that would define his life: a chance encounter with Peter O’Donnell and crashing the principal’s car. Crashing the car put paid to a piloting career. A visit to the library during an Easter vacation in 1999 and meeting the late Mr. O’Donnell stirred his interest in writing. That and his brother’s death inspired him to write stories with a host of characters and long tenses. Stevenson first came to the attention of British readers when he won two consecutive young poetry awards for excellence. Today he is slowly becoming one of England’s acclaimed vivid adventure writers. He communicates to his readers a deep interest in backstage political theories. Disagreeing with the established order that espionage anecdotes are on a decline, he believes that the spying game has become too established or commercialized to be over and that there is “much more to spying than is normally acknowledged.” He has degrees in business computing and administration but prefers the task of writing instead of an undemanding business office. After the July 7 bombings in London, Stevenson wrote many articles about war, terrorism, and the clash of democratic Western societies with fundamentalist Muslim ones. A reporter once wrote, “His clarity of vision on the local impact of terrorist threat is alarming.” He adds, “Terrorism is terrible business, and at times, it could rejuvenate a society, but more often than not, it destroys.” Stevenson is an avid enthusiast of unknown heroes whose contributions are hidden in the annals of secret documents or power-hungry officials. He believes his heroes should have communion with tea in the morning, shoot the villain in the head during lunch, and still be able to read a bedtime story in the evening to a loved one. These are similar views that one of his fictional heroines, Susan Dax, expresses. His fictional books are expressively imaginative. Stevenson says, “I’ve always been a big fan of Lara Croft and Modesty Blasé depictions. I figured it was time for a new heroine to take the stage, take our minds off the near ugliness of the world. Enter Susan Dax, a girl lacking nothing, needing nothing, but doing her utmost to do anything in order to find the truth. Such passion is hard to come by.” He writes his best-selling adventure tales in a cottage overlooking the foothills of Bridlington, Yorkshire. Steven is the 2010 recipient of the Book Foundation Medal for Distinguished Letters. For more information about his books, visit Xlibris.com.