Slow Burner

From Citizendium
Revision as of 14:30, 24 September 2020 by imported>Hayford Peirce (→‎Plot: changed a word)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This article is developed but not approved.
Main Article
Discussion
Related Articles  [?]
Bibliography  [?]
External Links  [?]
Citable Version  [?]
 
This editable, developed Main Article is subject to a disclaimer.
(CC) Photo: Clayton Evans
William Haggard on the back cover of The Conspirators, 1967
Authors [about]:
Hayford Peirce and others.
CZ is an open collaboration. Please
join in to develop this article!

Slow Burner is a 1958 suspense novel by the British author William Haggard published in England by Cassell and in the United States by Little Brown. It was Haggard's first novel and the first of many involving his protagonist Colonel Charles Russell, the head of the unobtrusive but lethal Security Executive, a government counter-intelligence agency. Like most of the other works by Haggard and some by his near contemporaries Victor Canning and Michael Gilbert, it is both a standard novel of suspense and a semi-political thriller about the reactions of those in high government positions who scent potential danger to their own political standing from the on-going events of the novel.

Plot

Protagonist is perhaps too strong a word to describe Colonel Russell. As Haggard himself wrote about his fiction:

My novels are chiefly novels of suspense with a background of international politics. A Colonel Charles Russell of the Security Executive, a not entirely imaginary British counter-espionage organization, while not a protagonist in the technical sense, holds the story line together in the background by his operations, while the characters in the foreground carry the action."[1]

Nuclear Development, a British agency headed by William Nichol, has developed a valuable new source of atomic power called Slow Burner. Very small quantities of it can generate vast amounts of power, and rather than needing enormous industrial plants to contain it, once developed, useful quantities can be carried about in containers no larger than a suitcase. Unless properly handled, however, it emits deadly epsilon rays, but nevertheless has recently been successfully installed in a number of English factories and is now considered by the British Government to be a vital part of its future plans.

References

  1. From the back flap of the dust jacket of the Walker and Company American edition of The Conspirators, New York, 1967