My Twelve@Random novel for June (each month I read a book selected from my Calibre catalogue by a random number generator) was A RAFT OF SWORDS by Duncan Kyle (1973). Kyle was a British thriller writer of the Alistair MacLean era, and seems all but forgotten, which is a shame, as his books are very good. I’m currently working my way through them all, so this random pick was a happy coincidence. It’s the sixth I’ve read of the author’s fifteen novels. A cold war story, it concerns an underwater nuclear missile launch platform situated off the coast of Vancouver, abandoned by the Soviets some years ago after becoming obsolete. With an international peace conference due in the Canadian city, the KGB has discovered that the platform is not only still functional but also armed with six missiles. A mission is launched to secretly dismantle and remove the weapon. The plot follows the Soviets as they hijack a midget submarine (rare, cutting edge tech when the novel was written) and abduct a British man who can operate it. Meanwhile, British and American intelligence agencies gradually become aware that something strange is going on, and endeavour to find out what. The way that multiple characters piece together the clues is gripping, and the entire book entertaining. My only issue is that the stakes don’t seem very high. After all, the Soviets are removing the missiles, not installing them, and if discovery threatens the conference, then how can the reader cheer for the intelligence agencies? Nevertheless, a good read.
















