'Topical, authoritative and gripping' Charles Cumming
'Tight, pacey and strong on atmosphere' Michael Palin
'Completely unputdownable - gripping' Seb Emina
'Compelling' Mishal Husain
'Draws you in from the first line and keeps you guessing until, literally, the very last' Allan Little
'Thrilling' Dame Ann Leslie
'The real deal' Kirsty Wark
'Gut-wrenching' Edward Stourton
Veteran BBC reporter William Carver is in Cairo - bang in the middle of the Arab Spring. 'The only story in the world' according to his editor. But it isn't - there's another story, more significant and potentially more dangerous, and if no one else is willing to tell it ... then Carver will, whatever the consequences.
A SINGLE SOURCE tells two stories, which over a few tumultuous months come together to prove inextricably linked. There are the dramatic, world-changing events across North Africa and the Middle East, as protests led by a new generation of tech-savvy youngsters challenge the established order. Then there are two Eritrean brothers, desperate to make their way up from the Horn of Africa across the continent to a better life in Europe. The horrors they endure at the hands of people traffickers and others along the way test their endurance and humanity to its limit.
William Carver spots the Arab Spring early, aided by one of the infamous 'Listeners' at the BBC monitoring station in Caversham. He and his producer, Patrick, chase the story across North Africa before arriving in Egypt where the battle between the corrupt old order and the new will be both bloody and potentially definitive.
The world is watching, but its attention span is increasingly short. Carver knows the story is a complex one and, in the age of Facebook, Twitter and rolling news, difficult stories are getting harder to tell. If everyone is a reporter, then who do you believe?
*Praise for Peter Hanington's A DYING BREED, which first featured William Carver*
'Wholly compelling and shrewdly wise' William Boyd
'A belting good read' A.L. Kennedy
'I look forward to more of Hanington's work with great expectations' Melvyn Bragg
'Enthralling' Michael Palin
'Thoughtful, atmospheric and grippingly plotted' Guardian
'Hanington has true talent' The Times