Book Review: The Shiro Project by David Khara

IMG_1565.PNGThe sequel to “The Bleiberg Project”, the new Consortium thriller “The Shiro Project ” seamlessly begins where the first book left off.

The readers finds Eytan Morg getting ready for a much needed R&R but was interrupted when his dearest friend Eli was kidnapped by the Consortium.

To get Eli back, Eytan has to go on a mission for the Consortium with the uber dangerous and cold blooded assassin Elena. And together, they have to neutralize a threat that has its roots from World War II.

David Khara wrote this book several years ago, but it’s topic is as fresh as today’s headlines. And yes, this is a work of fiction. Still, while reading it, one cannot help but ask the question, what if it is true?

The Shiro Project is Rated M for Mature due to violence. There are no sex scenes in this book.

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Can a lone man stop mass destruction looming from the past? Reporter Branislav Poborsky is running away from a bad marriage when he witnesses the Czech army covering up the extermination of an entire village.

Saved in extremis by the gentle-giant Mossad agent Eytan Morgenstern, he is thrown into a troubling race to defuse a larger-than-life conspiracy. After Eytan’s mentor is kidnapped, he must join forces with his arch-rival to put an end to a mysterious group that has weapons of mass destruction.

Once again, the atrocities of World War II come back to haunt the modern world. What links exist between Japanese camps in China in the 1940s, a US Army research center in the 1950s, and the deadly threat Eytan faces today? From Prague to Tokyo, with stops in Ireland, yesterday’s enemies become today’s best allies and mankind seems on the verge of repeating the errors of the past.