Difference between revisions of "A Question of Trust"
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Just as they are about to be killed, however, the rig finally starts moving and it turns out that Tom has accidentally programmed it on a wild Fibonacci spiral. While this is going on, Tom and Dorothy manage to grab hold of the latest tranche of cash and make their escape from the rig by boat, just before it disappears over the continental shelf and sinks. The Todger Squad manage to make their escape, but Gunther and Dirk are lost at sea. The fate of the remainder of the Seigneur's mob remains uncertain, although Tom and Dorothy think they glimpse the Seigneur himself just before the rig goes over the edge. | Just as they are about to be killed, however, the rig finally starts moving and it turns out that Tom has accidentally programmed it on a wild Fibonacci spiral. While this is going on, Tom and Dorothy manage to grab hold of the latest tranche of cash and make their escape from the rig by boat, just before it disappears over the continental shelf and sinks. The Todger Squad manage to make their escape, but Gunther and Dirk are lost at sea. The fate of the remainder of the Seigneur's mob remains uncertain, although Tom and Dorothy think they glimpse the Seigneur himself just before the rig goes over the edge. | ||
− | Tom and Dorothy get back to the shore at Burnham-on-Sea and get on the next train back to Bristol. However, on the way, Tom gets a call from Matheson who requests that stop off on the way so they can meet in a beach hut in Weston-super-Mare. She pulls a gun on them and they give her the cash, but unbeknownst to her, Dorothy has swapped most of | + | Tom and Dorothy get back to the shore at Burnham-on-Sea and get on the next train back to Bristol. However, on the way, Tom gets a call from Matheson who requests that stop off on the way so they can meet in a beach hut in Weston-super-Mare. She pulls a gun on them and they give her the bag full of cash, but unbeknownst to her, Dorothy has swapped most of the money out for Tom's Todger Squad rugby shirt, now filled with sand to weigh it down. Tom and Dorothy make good their second escape of the day and return home. Tom uses some of the money to extricate his father from the Tulpencoin scam and Dorothy buys a load of new equipment to try to placate Ali.}} |
Revision as of 16:49, 14 January 2021
A Question of Trust is a book by Jonathan Pinnock. It is the second in the Mathematical Mystery series and was published by Farrago Books in April 2019.
Blurb
A witty, fast-paced thriller with a dash of mathematics and a large dose of danger
Life is not going smoothly for Tom Winscombe. His girlfriend Dorothy has vanished, taking with her all the equipment and money of the company she ran with her friend Ali. Now Tom and Ali are forced to eke out an awkward shared bedsit existence while they try to work out what she is up to.
Meanwhile, Tom has other things on his mind, including how to untangle his father from a cryptocurrency scam, how to break into a hospital in order to interrogate an old acquaintance and what is the significance of the messages he’s been receiving from Rufus Fairbanks’s LinkedIn account.
Tom and Ali’s investigations lead them in a host of unexpected and frankly dangerous directions, involving a pet python, an offshore stag do and an improbable application of the Fibonacci sequence. But at the end of it all, will they find Dorothy – and will she ever be able to explain just exactly what is going on?
Critical Reception
The reception to the book was generally favourable. Professor Ian Stewart, author of Do Dice Play God? and the Science of Discworld books, summed it up as follows:
A dash of IT, a sprinkle of maths, an engaging and all-too-believable cast of anti-heroes, and a bonkers plot with all the precision and elegance of a Fibonacci spiral. Profane, irreverent, witty well-aimed, and fizzing with imagination.