Bad Actors (Slough House)
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4.2 • 5 Ratings
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- $17.99
Publisher Description
In London’s MI5 headquarters a scandal is brewing that could disgrace the entire intelligence community. The Downing Street superforecaster—a specialist who advises the Prime Minister’s office on how policy is likely to be received by the
electorate—has disappeared without a trace. Claude Whelan, who was once head of MI5, has been tasked with tracking her down.
But the trail leads him straight back to Regent’s Park itself, with First Desk Diana Taverner as chief suspect. Has Taverner overplayed her hand at last? Meanwhile, her Russian counterpart, Moscow intelligence’s First Desk, has cheekily showed up
in London and shaken off his escort. Are the two unfortunate events connected?
Over at Slough House, where Jackson Lamb presides over some of MI5’s most embittered demoted agents, the slow horses are doing what they do best, and adding a little bit of chaos to an already unstable situation …
There are bad actors everywhere, and they usually get their comeuppance before the credits roll. But politics is a dirty business, and in a world where lying, cheating and backstabbing are the norm, sometimes the good guys can find themselves outgunned.
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
Politics past and present complicate a missing-persons case in this witty outing of Mick Herron’s beloved Slough House espionage series. When government think tank “superforecaster” Sophie de Greer goes missing, Britain’s domestic intelligence agency, MI5, is charged with finding her. But as the inept rejects of Slough House get drawn in, they turn over some long-forgotten rocks which lead to suspicions that MI5’s own ambitious Diana Taverner may be involved in more than the search. Mick Herron excels at building plot twists while his hilarious cast of misfits, under the direction of the legendarily filthy Jackson Lamb, piece it all together. Pitting Lamb’s slow horses against his boss and the bureaucracy that rejected them, Herron adroitly depicts all the resentment his wonderfully drawn outcasts have against their overlords, adding belly laughs to the first-rate spy thriller plot. Narrator Gerard Doyle’s personable delivery captures both the smart subtlety and the cheeky humour of these irresistible Bad Actors for a wildly good time.