Days of the Eagle
Everyone thinks they know how Donald Trump became President of the USA, his record as President and how he left office. But what if nearly everything they thought they knew was wrong, that there were conspiracies within conspiracies to put him in power and influence his actions?
Days of the Eagle is an entirely fictional account of how this might have happened, but it is also intended to raise a smile, at a time when smiles are very much needed. While some events referred to in the book are real, most are not, this book brings fake history to a new level.
At least, I think it's all fake history, but today, who really knows?
Swiss Goals
Anyone who has ever watched ‘Match of the Day’ knows perfectly well that there was no football World Cup in 1942, but what if they are all wrong? Henpecked accountant Stan Harris suddenly finds that life is no longer boring when Prime Minister Winston Churchill hand picks him to lead a crack England football team deep into occupied Europe to win the World Cup. But is this to prove an own goal by Churchill? The mission is only possible if Stan can assemble an England team in time.
On his way to play football Stan inadvertently meets the Krays, provides the origin for 007 and hears about a very different Sound of Music. Switzerland turns out to be no holiday camp as British and German conspiracies converge on the football pitch to place the future of civilisation at risk, with everything depending on just one football match. Combining high wartime drama, special operations, conspiracies galore and more laughs than the censor will allow, Swiss goals is the ultimate wartime espionage football fusion novel.