From the bestselling, prize-winning author of Say Nothing and Empire of Pain, a spellbinding account of a family devastated by the sudden death of their nineteen-year-old son, only to discover that he had created a secret life which drew him into the dangerous criminal underworld that lies beneath London’s glittering surface.
In the early morning of November 29th, 2019, surveillance cameras at the headquarters of MI6, Britain’s spy agency, captured video of a young man pacing back and forth on a high balcony of Riverwalk, a luxury tower on the bank of the river Thames. At 2:24 a.m., he jumped into the river.
In a quiet London neighborhood several miles away, Rachelle Brettler was worried about her son. Zac had told her that he had gone to stay with a friend, but then he did not come home. Days later, a police car pulled up and two officers relayed the dreadful news: her son was dead.
In their unbearable grief, Rachelle and her husband, Matthew, struggled to understand what had happened to Zac. He had his troubles, but in no way seemed suicidal. As they would soon discover, however, there was a lot they did not know about their son. Only after his death did they learn that he had adopted a fictitious alter-ego: Zac Ismailov, son of a Russian oligarch and heir to a great fortune. Under this guise, Zac had become entangled with a slippery London businessman named Akbar Shamji, and a murderous gangster known as “Indian Dave.” As the Brettlers set about investigating their son’s death, they were pulled into a different and more dangerous London than the one they’d always known, and came to believe that something much more nefarious than a suicide had claimed Zac’s life. But to their immense frustration, Scotland Yard seemed unable—or unwilling—to bring the perpetrators to justice.
In a bravura feat of reporting and writing, Patrick Radden Keefe chronicles the Brettlers’ quest, peeling back layers of mystery and exposing the seedy truths behind the glamorous London of posh mansions and private nightclubs, a city in which everything is for sale, and aspirational fantasies are underwritten by dirty money and corruption. London Falling is a mesmerizing investigation of an inexplicable death and a powerful narrative driven by suspense and staggering revelations. But it is also an intimate and deeply poignant inquiry into the nature of parental love and the challenges of being a parent today, a portrait of a family trying to solve the riddle not just of how their son died, but of who he really was in life.
Patrick Radden Keefe is a staff writer at The New Yorker and the author of The Snakehead and Chatter. His work has also appeared in The New York Times Magazine, Slate, New York, and The New York Review of Books. He received the 2014 National Magazine Award for Feature Writing, for his story "A Loaded Gun," was a finalist for the National Magazine Award for Reporting in 2015 and 2016, and is also the recipient of an Eric and Wendy Schmidt Fellowship at the New America Foundation and a Guggenheim Fellowship.
Don't start London Falling, or any of Patrick Radden Keefe's books, for that matter, if you want to get anything else done. You will be handcuffed to the book, in thrall with Zac Brettler's story, until you turn the final page.
If Radden Keefe can make the Troubles both explicable and relatively easy to follow for a history novice like me, he can explain most anything. He structures his books in such a way that makes them compulsively readable, leaving the major revelations at the end so you finish the story with mouth agape.
Nobody does nonfiction like Patrick Radden Keefe. London Falling is both a meticulously-researched descent into London's billionaire-fueled criminal underworld, and a deeply intimate family portrait of love and loss across generations. It's all handled with Keefe's usual skill and care, and yet another work of his that explores the hunt for justice in very unjust times.
Another book that I will be recommending to absolutely everyone I know (sorry in advance, absolutely everyone I know).
Easily the best book I’ve read all year. Keefe effortlessly weaves together social, cultural, political and economic history into a tapestry to display deeply human dramas.
This time, the tapestry is the sordid underbelly of London and the drama is a hauntingly personal family story. And the story is at once so common and familiar—do we ever really know who our children are, especially as they start to create a life of their own—and utterly foreign—who could imagine their child consorting with underworld bosses?
Keefe starts with the tragedy of losing a child but then unwinds the fabric, thread by thread, until we understand the true depths of this tragedy in a way only he could tell. Along the way, you might occasionally be baffled by the bits of history and character studies he employs. What does this have to do with the death of Zac Brettler, you may ask. And then, without fail, you will be gobsmacked by how it all fits together.
Like everything PRK has written, I loved this. I loved it for its investigative journalism, for the way he brought this mystery fully to life, but mostly for the way he wrote this book with the frame of a grieving mother and father. A mother and father desperate to know who their son really was and desperate to find truth. Truth would be perhaps a form of justice or perhaps more connection to Zac, whomever he became and whomever he could have become.
Just like his other books, Patrick Radden Keefe combines exhaustive research with this incredible eye for humanity and emotion. He uncovers all the facts and leaves a very satisfying, exhaustive list of sources at the end. But he also identifies the human connections and the little emotional truths that hit you right in the gut. Another devastating masterpiece by my favorite author.
If you've read Say Nothing or Empire of Pain, you know that Patrick Radden Keefe tells a really good story. Full of twists and turns, and shocking revelations, Radden Keefe's newest, LONDON FALLING, is just that: a captivating true story about one London family's worst nightmare. On November 29, 2019, at 2:24 a.m. near Vauxhall Bridge, nineteen-year-old Zac Brettler jumped off a fifth-floor balcony and into the Thames. Across the river, cameras from MI6 headquarters captured everything: Zac pacing the balcony while every light in unit 504 of the luxury high-rise glowed behind him, and Zac leaping to his death. What follows is an enthralling and meticulously written account detailing the confluence of people and events that led to that tragic night. Who was Zac Brettler, and why was he in that apartment? Was his death a suicide or the result of something more sinister? Radden Keefe conducts interviews with family and friends, reads transcripts, tracks each lead and clue, and discovers that the filaments of the mystery at the heart of this story reach deep into the corrupt criminal underbelly of London.
The investigative New Yorker article that I read sometime in 2024 about this story still remains vivid in my mind. That's the power of Patrick Radden Keefe's storytelling. While I remember having many questions and hoping we would see a fully-formed book, I must have missed the news about the book. Will be counting down to publication date with extreme impatience, so I can delve into whatever intriguing new information and new angles this book will bring. Can't wait to revisit this space and update my thoughts once I read the book.
Keefe’s outstanding investigative reporting brings to light the darkest parts of London that lead the Brettlers’ son Zac to end up in the Thames. A stunning portrait of a family, their love for their son and the quest to seek justice.
Coming out April 2026- a fascinating narrative non-fiction story! PRK was able to get so much detail by being in close contact with Zac’s parents and it makes the story move! Highly recommend this one!