Fountain of Diamonds takes a real and uncomfortable piece of history—French nuclear testing in the Pacific—and turns it into a thriller that feels deeply personal. The story begins quietly, with an email from a grieving mother’s friend to a podcaster, asking a simple but devastating question: what really happened to her daughter?
That question pulls Robert Tait into his first international investigation. What starts as a missing-persons case soon stretches across Tahiti, Paris, and beyond, uncovering environmental crimes, shadowy corporations, and secrets that have been buried for decades. The strength of the book lies in how human it feels—every lead connects back to people still waiting for answers.
The writing stays grounded, letting everyday moments—hotels, dinners, flights—carry the weight of much larger truths. By the end, you’re not just chasing a mystery; you’re confronting the cost of silence and power.
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https://www.bookbelow.com/book-review/fountain-of-diamonds/

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