World Pacific, Peter Mann
World Pacific, Peter Mann
List: $32.99 | Sale: $23.10
Club: $16.49

World Pacific
A Novel

Author: Peter Mann

Narrator: Josh Innerst, Kathrin Kana, James Meunier

Unabridged: 15 hr 12 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Harper

Published: 08/19/2025


Synopsis

A New Yorker Best Book of 2025A darkly comic novel of intrigue, adventure, and the perils of self-invention from the author of The Torqued Man, set in San Francisco and the Asian Pacific during the outbreak of the Second World War.In 1939, just as the clouds of war are gathering, Richard Halifax—boys' adventure writer of manly bravado and the breeziest of prose styles—vanishes in the Pacific. Halifax was attempting to sail a Chinese junk from Hong Kong to San Francisco as part of the World’s Fair festivities on Treasure Island. But while his disappearance upends the lives of those left in his wake back home, both his machinations and his letters to his young readers live on.Hildegard Rauch, an émigré painter and the daughter of Germany’s greatest living writer in exile, finds her twin brother in a coma after an attempted suicide. He left a mysterious note that sends her on a search for the truth about her brother’s relationship with Richard Halifax and the dangerous secret he entrusted to the writer before his voyage.Simon Faulk, a British intelligence officer, has been assigned to ferret out Nazi spies in California. He learns of the arrival of a mysterious American agent from across the Pacific, part of a joint German-Japanese operation.Told in the alternating voices of these three characters, set against the growing threat of another world war and a World’s Fair dedicated to peace, World Pacific is a madcap quixotic tale that explores the many forms of shipwreck, exile, betrayal, and the stories we tell ourselves in the fight to stay afloat.

About Peter Mann

Peter Mann is the author of the novel The Torqued Man, named one of The New Yorker’s Best Books of 2022 and Best Historical Fiction of the year by CrimeReads. Originally from Kansas City, he is a longtime resident of San Francisco and teaches history and literature at Stanford. He also draws comics on his Substack newsletter The Quixote Syndrome.


Reviews

Goodreads review by None on September 22, 2025

Richard Halifax loves to play dead, and I often wished he would stay that way so the book could move on without his endless posturing. In 1939 he is declared lost at sea, yet his letters to the “Dicky Halifax Junior Adventurers Club” keep arriving, filled with boasts and absurdities: “If the brain s......more

Goodreads review by Philip on September 30, 2025

I wanted to like this book more because it promised to be a clever and paced blend of historical fiction and satire but it fell short due to the tortured prose and convoluted plot. You can tell the writer is having fun but the fun didn’t really translate to this reader. I appreciate the inventive us......more

Goodreads review by Dara on September 19, 2025

This is an original, sometimes strange, and often funny espionage novel. Given all that, it might be easy to miss that it’s also a very cleverly plotted and elaborately structured espionage novel. The Thomas Mann references and vividly realized historic settings are a bonus, Dicky’s many (so many!)......more

Goodreads review by Alexandra on September 25, 2025

World Pacific is a great boy book. It has plot twists, spies, courtesans, grisly torture, World War II, and even more plot twists. I really loved the historical color of San Francisco on the eve of World War II and the intricate spy plot felt like T. Coraghessan Boyle meets the Third Man. Very enjoy......more

Goodreads review by Katherine on September 18, 2025

I learned so much reading this book - and realize there is so much more I want and need to learn! Reading tip: get past the disgusting parts - they do lessen in intensity imho - and relinquish any urge to force this rollicking read into anything it just isn’t, in terms of style or content or straight......more