WolfSpawn by Kris Brooker

Historical Conspiracy Thriller
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WolfSpawn by Kris Brooker

January 1945. Waffen-SS seal a secret laboratory below Auschwitz. A weapon to win a war that may take a hundred years to fight is driven away into darkness.

London, present day. Joe is a brilliant young scientist who understands the genome, but not the opposite sex. An impossible mystery involving both is about to reset his life.

Issy is pretty. She’s also a liar and a thief, and about to drag Joe on a journey of self-discovery.

To find a family Issy has never known they’ll walk headfirst into European Nationalism. Unwittingly falling into an ideological plot, that makes them fugitives from Interpol, and targets of a Nazi Cabal.

 What links EU political elites to a pharmaceutical giant buying forgotten SS bunkers, and how does Hitler’s death camp connect to a post war Children’s Foundation?

They’re about to understand the parts they play in an eighty year old conspiracy, and the true legacy of World War Two.

4.7
4.7 out of 5 stars (based on 243 reviews)

A story made all the more powerful given what’s happened in the world recently.

Karen Gee

Beautifully woven story based in historical fact as Isla takes a journey of emotive self discovery. Brooker has it spot on with this energetic and somewhat alarming Thriller. WolfSpawn presented me with a fascinating puzzle to unlock, and a conspiracy that could so easily be the truth. Scary stuff

Brad Enly

If you think the Nazis were gone you’d be wrong. WolfSpawn shows us this as it mixes the past with the very real and dangerous present day. Tense and edgy thriller that roams Eastern Europe to find danger and conspiracy at every turn.

Gordon Soams

I’ve found a new favourite author. My third read from authorsark and just as brill as the other two.

Gerry Preic

Unforgettable, moving and unputdownable. Issy is a wonderful character trying to discover her family and unravel her past. Little does she know its wrapped up in Europe’s uncertain future. Colourful, insightful, and a little scary the way things are

Peter Spede