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ThrillerHistorical FictionPolitical Fiction

Robert Harris

British · b. 1957

5 books reviewed Avg rating 4.3 / 5Top rating 4.6 / 5

WHSmith Literary Award (Fatherland, 1992)

Robert Harris is a British novelist and former journalist known for meticulously researched political and historical thrillers, including Fatherland, Enigma, the Cicero trilogy, and Conclave.

Robert Harris spent his early career as a journalist and political reporter — most notably as political editor of the Observer — and that background is visible on every page he writes. His debut novel Fatherland, published in 1992, imagined a 1964 Europe in which Nazi Germany had won the Second World War, following a Berlin detective uncovering evidence of the Holocaust in a society that has buried it. The book was a phenomenon, selling millions of copies and establishing Harris as one of the most commercially assured and intellectually serious thriller writers in Britain. It was followed by Enigma, set among the codebreakers at Bletchley Park, and Archangel, a Russia-set thriller involving a Stalin-era secret. All three demonstrated Harris’s gift for taking a specific, intensely researched historical or political context and extracting from it a page-turning plot.

The Cicero trilogy — Imperium, Lustrum, and Dictator — is arguably his most ambitious achievement. Narrated by Cicero’s slave and secretary Tiro, the three novels cover the arc of the Roman Republic’s final decades through the eyes of its greatest advocate. Harris had the nerve to make a lawyer the hero of a political thriller and to sustain it across three volumes and a thousand pages; the result is one of the best fictional treatments of Roman politics ever written. Pompeii, a standalone novel set during the eruption of Vesuvius in 79 AD, proved he could do compressed, single-event drama with equal skill. Later novels including The Ghost, An Officer and a Spy (fictionalising the Dreyfus affair), Munich, V2, and Act of Oblivion have confirmed Harris as a writer of rare consistency: each book is tightly controlled, impeccably researched, and driven by a genuine engagement with power, institutional corruption, and the individual trapped inside history.

Harris writes with the discipline of a journalist rather than the expansiveness of a literary novelist, which occasionally frustrates readers looking for richer interiority or prose that draws attention to itself. But that discipline is also his greatest strength: his sentences are clean and purposeful, his pacing is close to flawless, and he never mistakes length for depth. Among contemporary British writers working in the thriller form, he is in a category of his own.

5 Books Reviewed

An Officer and a Spy book cover

An Officer and a Spy

by Robert Harris

4.6

Colonel Georges Picquart witnesses the public degradation of Captain Alfred Dreyfus in 1895 and believes it justified. As head of French military intelligence, he begins to discover that Dreyfus was framed — and that exposing the truth will destroy him.

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Fatherland book cover

Fatherland

by Robert Harris

4.5

Berlin, 1964. The Reich has won the war. A routine murder investigation draws SS detective Xavier March into a conspiracy that could expose the greatest secret of the Nazi empire — the secret that the rest of the world must never learn.

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Conclave book cover
Bestseller

Conclave

by Robert Harris

4.3

When the Pope dies suddenly, the College of Cardinals gathers in the Sistine Chapel to elect his successor. Behind the locked doors of the Vatican, Dean of the College Cardinal Lomeli presides over a conclave of intrigue, ambition, and hidden sin — where faith and politics are indistinguishable.

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Pompeii book cover

Pompeii

by Robert Harris

4.2

In the four days before Vesuvius erupts in 79 AD, a young Roman engineer named Attilius discovers that the great aqueduct serving the Bay of Naples has been poisoned — and that the corruption he uncovers runs as deep as the mountain's roots.

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Archangel book cover

Archangel

by Robert Harris

4.1

A British historian in post-Soviet Moscow discovers a notebook that may contain Stalin's most dangerous secret — one that leads him to the remote Arctic city of Archangel and a discovery that could reshape Russia's future.

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