Valentines Cup a Wartime Spy Thriller Book

The first book in the Valentines series

Undercover agent Alistair Valentine overhears a few words that will alter the course of the war ...

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I Went To Bed and Thought No More

The following morning, I travelled on the train from East Anglia down to Bristol.

I was meeting the UWE (University of the West of England) team to discuss recording my audio drama ‘Brunel’s Vision – One Single Ticket.’ I took out my notebook and pen. The journey was a blur. Liverpool Street Station, the London Underground, Paddington and the GWR. By the time I’d reached Bath Spa, I had hand-written eighty pages.

My skiers were two brothers named Alistair and Freddie Valentine. They lived at Chalet Monte Rosa in Zermatt, although they had been born in England. They lived with their mother Christina and a mysterious character always known as Herr Seiler.

It was clear in my mind; this sepia photograph had been taken before their careers kicked into action. Alistair would work in the wine trade in London, before being recruited into British Intelligence by Professor Brimblecombe.

Freddie would join the RAF; but his service as a Spitfire ‘ace’ pilot would be cut short because of ridiculous accident. He too would become a spy, like his brother.

As the train pulled into Bristol Temple Meads, I was now looking at eighty pages of a fast-paced story. It was brisk because I was writing at speed, anxious to commit everything to paper.


 

Photography copyright © Fritz Lauener

The Journey Home


The four days with my ‘Brunel Team’ was fabulously productive and enjoyable. I forgot all about Alistair and Freddie … until the train journey back. I re-read my scribble, making notes and deletions. Once home, I typed up my story and gave it to a trusty few. Feedback was positive. Points were raised: anachronisms and mistakes addressed. But I knew I had a good plot that had possibilities.

A week or so later, I attended the Frinton Literary Evening which was hosted by our local bookshop. One of the guest speakers was an author called Fergus McNeill, a canny Scot who’d just had a book published. During the interval I got chatting to him: Get it read,’ he said enthusiastically,‘by a local library reader group. They can be brutal, but the exercise is important: reading is what they do!’

And I did. Their response showed incredible insight. I followed some of their suggestions. The lockdown gave me a chance to sit down with a friend – a retired teacher and linguist – to read the whole draft out loud and hear how it sounded.

Did the narrative capture the same pace as my original handwritten draft on the train? I can only hope it did and that you enjoy sharing the lives of those two skiers in the photograph.


What Readers Think

  • Surely this will make a great film!

    When war or the threat of war is “over there”, we care, sure, but then we grab an ale and decide on dinner. When we face an invasion HERE, though, every citizen becomes a bit of a hero. The boy delivering an apple to the old woman next door. The young girl helping to sew blackout curtains. The lorry driver making his or her vital rounds under threat of another bombing run. This is a novel with a hero, or two, but the large picture is that every man and woman had a part to play in preserving the freedom of a country and a continent. From the start, this story conveys that sense of time and place, blending actual characters from our history with fictional, but wholly plausible, characters. It does not detail the horrors of war; there are no close ups of trauma, so to speak. We have seen enough, I say. A great beauty of Mr. Wallace’s writing is that those details aren’t required. This not to say that the trauma isn’t there. It is, but we are placed in a world where wartime is implicit, along with an optimism that simply must exist. As you read this book, try to imagine what actors could play the lead roles in a major motion picture release. Surely this will make a great film.
    Rodney J. Little
    Charlotte, NC
  • A fast paced WW2 spy thriller that combines credible characters with the Nazi notorious. Chapter 2 of the book is called "hooked" and by then I was! The twists and turns in the plot kept me engaged throughout and I'm looked forward to the next book in the series.
    Nigel Clarke
    goodreads
  • 5.0 out of 5 stars Can’t wait for the next book!

    I really enjoyed the book , the brothers characters were convincing and likeable. The way the story draws you in and the terrible plan that starts to unfold makes it an exciting read . I’m looking forward to the next book .
    Bernard Johnston
  • 1943 Alastair Valentine, a covert operative for British intelligence in Nazi Germany, discovers a threat to Britain so deadly that he must risk his life to get the information back to his spymaster in London.. From London, Brimblecome the spy master controls and manipulates his agents, but all is not as it seems and deception is found in the most unlikely places - Alastair discovers that he is not the only one good at keeping secrets.... This is a fast moving and meticulously researched plot - a good read with unexpected twists that make you keep turning the pages. Don't read before bedtime if you want a good nights sleep!
    Mrs P
    A fast moving and meticulously researched plot