ZB ZB
Opinion
Live now
Start time
Playing for
End time
Listen live
Listen to NAME OF STATION
Up next
Listen live on
ZB

"Completely unexpected": Tough themes and twisting turns in 'The Truth About Ruby Cooper'

Author
Newstalk ZB,
Publish Date
Sat, 28 Mar 2026, 2:06pm
Photo / 123RF
Photo / 123RF

"Completely unexpected": Tough themes and twisting turns in 'The Truth About Ruby Cooper'

Author
Newstalk ZB,
Publish Date
Sat, 28 Mar 2026, 2:06pm

The Truth About Ruby Cooper by Liz Nugent  

If my sister hadn’t been beautiful, none of it would have happened. 

Ruby Cooper and her sister, Erin, live an idyllic life in their close-knit church community in Boston. But when Ruby is sixteen, she is involved in an incident that causes her family’s world to implode. 

Across decades, the fallout leaves a wake of destruction behind Ruby in Dublin and Erin in Boston. 

Not that Ruby wants to think about the past. 

But it can’t stay a secret forever. 

 

Battle of the Arctic by Hugh Sebag-Montefiore  

Winston Churchill called it 'the worst journey in the world'. But was even this telling quote, describing the nightmarish torment experienced while transporting military aid to northern Russia during World War Two, an understatement?  

As this book's title implies, Battle of the Arctic tells a unique story. For much of the conflict was complicated by terrific storms, snow, ice, fog, whales and Arctic mirages, so that what is chronicled at times sounds like a cross between the nightmarish torment experienced by both Shackleton in his ship Endurance and Scott of the Antarctic, and an Arctic version of Robinson Crusoe. The action unfolded as Allied naval and merchant seamen, airmen, submariners, soldiers and intelligence officers delivered on their countries' promise to take arms to Russia notwithstanding the German attempts to hunt them in their aircraft, U-boats and surface fleet spearheaded by Tirpitz and Scharnhorst. 

When ships were attacked, and went down in seas so cold that a man could die after five minutes of immersion, it triggered events reminiscent of the do-or-die moments during the sinking of the Titanic. Men perished one by one in lifeboats, and as castaways on deserted Arctic islands where they were stalked by polar bears. 

Frostbitten and wounded survivors ended up in primitive Russian hospitals where amputations were carried out without anesthetics. Others, while stranded for months in the communist state they were aiding, experienced the murky worlds of the NKVD, and the gulag, as well as famine and prostitution. Using new material unearthed in American, British, Russian and German archives, as well as Polish, Norwegian, French and Dutch sources, and a remarkable collection of vivid witness accounts brought together at the passing of the last survivors, Hugh Sebag-Montefiore can at last shine a revealing light on this extraordinary tale that oscillates between the sailors' eye view on the front line, and the controversies that infuriated world leaders. 

 

LISTEN ABOVE 

Take your Radio, Podcasts and Music with you