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Matthew Tree
Author
We'll Never Know
Matthew Tree, author
A sexist science correspondent in England comes across the strangest of female interns at his newspaper. Researchers working on a secret government project are dying, apparently of natural causes, soon after they are retired. A feminist woman reporter tries to investigate. An American agent disguised as a hippy tries to stop her doing so. And finally, the science correspondent discovers a truth that he thought unthinkable.
Reviews
In this smart, genre-bending thriller, Tree (author of if Only, among other titles) crafts a gripping speculative mystery that intertwines journalism, government secrecy, and a highly literate narrator’s personal revelation. In a male-dominated newsroom in London, a sexist science correspondent finds himself confronted with the unexpected presence of Adalyn, an intern whose intellect and determination challenge his preconceived notions, all as mysterious deaths plague retired government researchers. The plot thickens when the narrator must work with feminist reporter Catherine Edge—“Ms. Edge, to you”—who is determined to uncover the truth behind these seemingly natural occurrences. What unfolds is a surprising but riveting tale of intrigue and discovery, where hidden agendas clash, long-held beliefs are shattered, and a narrator who thinks of women as objects for seducing is forced to confront both himself and a truth he once deemed unthinkable.

Thought-provoking but also straight-up provocative, We’ll Never Know entertains with well-crafted characters and a brisk, twisty plot, while also challenging societal norms and perceptions as it develops a resonant message about the importance of questioning authority and seeking the truth, no matter the obstacles. Readers on its wavelength—and who are comfortable with its sexual frankness and tragicomic depiction of misogyny—will find themselves engrossed from beginning to end, eager to uncover the secrets beneath the surface.

As the title suggests, a feeling of uncertainty roils the narrative. Despite the feeling of paranoia, dialogue and pacing are sharp as the tale touches on secret agents, politicians, amateur ufologists (“come to think of it, all ufologists are amateurs,” one character notes), “neo-Nazi nutjobs,” and elementary particles and the nature of gravity itself. For all the invention and comic energy, neither the unwavering intensity of the mystery nor the heady revelations ever let up until a conclusion that upends expectations—and then, for good measure, transcends them, too.

Takeaway: Twisty, literate speculative mystery finds a sexist reporter confronting everything.

Comparable Titles: Nick Harkaway, Cory Doctorow.

Production grades
Cover: B+
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A-

The Bookbag

Timothy Wyndham wants nothing more than to be different from his father, a drunk and chronic underachiever whose dreams of being exceptional at any of his artistic passions all failed miserably and who had endless crises of self confidence. So Tim applied himself to his studies, cultivated his abilities rather than his daydreams and set himself high but achievable ambitions.

After college, he avoided intensely competitive academia and became a science journalist. He wrote a couple of best-selling popular science books and now in his mid thirties, runs a well received scientific Q&A column in a broadsheet newspaper. He's a pompous and self-satisfied man who spends his free time seducing, banging, and dumping a succession of the newspaper's fresh-faced female interns. His current target is Adalyn, a new intern with flame-red hair and a slightly strange but very entrancing way about her.

Tim is used to letters and emails from over-invested readers but Melissa Hogg is the most insistent of them all. A middle-aged woman banging on about secret government projects and unexplained phenomena? Tim initially rolls his eyes. But it turns out that there is a secret government project and its researchers are dying in unexplained numbers. Tim's colleague and (somewhat bitter) ex-girlfriend Cathy Edge decides to investigate and pulls Tim along with her.

Meanwhile, Tim has succeeded in seducing Adalyn. Or is it the other way around? And the sex is both the best and the strangest that Tim has ever had. He can't stop thinking about it.

What ties it all together? Read on to find out!

We'll Never Know is a blend of thriller, sci-fi and eroticism. And it works really well because you're not sure which is dominant until you get to the end of the story. Government conspiracy? Alien infiltration? Or just a good excuse for some excellent bonking? You'll enjoy the journey and the end might well surprise you.

Tim's character arc is the strongest. He really does start out as a patronising and pompous sexist man whose self satisfaction blinds him to where his life has gone just as wrong as his father's, simply in a different way. He has to develop humility. The book is beautifully written in lovely flowing prose and with great dialogue, and the pace is wonderfully controlled. Tree has packed a great deal into just over two hundred pages and I really enjoyed the discipline in the storytelling.

Recommended.

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