This adventure centres on a teen lad with Asperger's who lives in his computer attic and hacks. Ah - no it doesn't. If it did he'd have lines, right?
This adventure centres on a retired agent who is called back by a Theresa May lookalike to control the young hacker Luke and point him at targets. Sir Adrian seems to be a reflection of the author, who is now in his eighties. He sends in the SAS but otherwise seems tolerant, then people start getting killed. My impression is that the story was dictated and not edited.
Sadly it's obvious that Forsyth doesn't have the foggiest idea what hackers do or how they do it. 'He got around the air gap which is considered impossible' from his attic? The air gap is got around by sending somebody to the office or bank which is not connected to the outside world, who plugs in a flashdrive to a computer in that building. Or by infecting a laptop carried by someone who works in that building. Hackers will look for badges dropped at conferences and airline ticket stubs, will skim debit cards, make phone calls impersonating staff, send phishing e-mails, so on, to gain details for access. Forsyth says none of this; he only knows a few buzz words which have been told to him by someone else. The other sides don't seem to have any hackers.
Similarly with the series of incidents which can be chalked up to Luke. Anyone who reads the news on the internet knows as much as Sir Adrian does about the goings on in global politics and the Novichok nerve agent. The various characters seldom interact and remain one-dimensional through the story. Apart from Mrs May-alike, we get no decent female roles, while nobody begins to discuss Asperger's. The solid characters were all soldiers, SAS and a former soldier in Scotland, now a gamekeeper; these came across well if, again, completely one-dimensionally. Mostly what they do is keep the boy alive and make exemplary shots.
Forsyth's wishful thinking near the end is quite fun and readers could enjoy the thinly-veiled portraits of the world leaders. I found the way that only a surname and location are required to track down a boy from outside his country, to be reminiscent of The Lord of The Rings (Shire, Baggins) and The Terminator (Sarah Connor).
If you want to read about hacking in thrillers, try DS Kane, Thomas Waite, Barry Eisler, Reece Hirsch, etc. If you want to support your longstanding favourite British author, read The Fox.
I downloaded an e-ARC from Fresh Fiction. This is an unbiased review.