Jeffrey Archer (b. 1940) is a rather ambiguous figure. An English politician with an Oxford education who left the political arena several times due to scandals, a philanthropist, a lord who was imprisoned for perjury and obstruction of justice, a man who started writing books to improve his financial situation. Already his first novel became a bestseller in the United States and gave the author the opportunity to pay off debts. And Archer became so interested in writing that he created more than 20 books. Folio Publishing House has published the novels of Cain and Abel, Only Time Will Tell, The Sins of the Parents, and The Mysteriously Hidden Mystery. a new series about Detective William Warwick, the protagonist of Harry Clifton's novels from The Clifton Chronicles, during which he travels the difficult path from a regular constable to a police commissioner. The novel begins with William graduating from university and, much to the displeasure of his father, a leading criminal lawyer, decides to join the London City Police instead of being his student in court, with good prospects of becoming a successful lawyer in the future. However, William, unlike his father, seeks not to protect rich villains, but to catch and imprison them, so he insists on his own and eventually gets such a desirable job in the police - albeit with a small salary, but with a high risk for life. But whether William Warwick will be a good cop and who will help him in this, read in J. Archer's new novel "Who does not risk."