<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><br>Erasmus Levine has a job like no other. He travels with the President of the United States at all times, and holds in his hands the power to obliterate life as we know it. <br>Levine is the man with the nuclear briefcase, part of a crack team of top-secret operatives established after 9/11, led by a man code- named Edelweiss. But not even Edelweiss knows the identity of their ultimate authority, Alpha.<br>But Levine has a secret, for years he has been receiving cryptic messages from Alpha, an elaborate communication that began with the words: we two against the world. Now he's thinking of escape and his chance comes during an official visit to Sweden.<br>But Alpha has other plans. From their first meeting in a network of tunnels and bunkers beneath the city, Levine is drawn into a plan to eliminate the world's nuclear arsenals. But is controlled demolition really the endgame? Could he be working towards a controlled apocalypse designed to wipe humanity from the face of the earth?<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>Enjoyable, ingenious . . . packed with fascinatingly arcane nuclear facts--<i><b>Myles McWeeney, Irish Independent</b></i><br><br>I don't think I have read such a philosophical, knowledge-studded and realistic adventure novel since Umberto Eco's <i>The Name of the Rose</i> <p/>--<i><b>Göteborgs-Posten</b></i><br><br>There are special trained super humans, amazingly transformed by surgery, quick-witted brains, codes and numerology, deceptions... But whilst other agent stories may only have this - spiced with some love in the sunset - <i>The Carrier</i> has more. Much more... Mattias Berg's knowledge in the scientific field is impressive, his storytelling skilled and well-balanced.--<i><b>Dagens Nyheter</b></i><br><br>What should a thriller do to rise above the ranks of the clichéd? It does no harm to demonstrate some intelligence and (if possible) an engagement with serious issues - but no polemics. Thankfully, Mattias Berg's <i>The Carrier</i> hits those targets squarely--<i><b>Barry Forshaw, The Independent</b></i><br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>Mattias Berg was born in Stockholm 1962. He studied journalism and literature, and has been a culture journalist since the late 1980s and worked at major Swedish newspapers, including <i>Dagens Nyheter</i> and <i>Expressen</i>. Since 2002 he has been employed at Swedish Radio, where he for ten years was the head of the C ulture Department. He initiated the highly regarded weekly show Konflikt (Conflict), which blends international current affairs<br>with culture issues. He lives in Stockholm with his wife and has two grown-up daughters.
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