



A Spy Alone
For fans of Damascus Station and Slow Horses
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4.2 • 244 Ratings
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- £3.99
Publisher Description
'Five stars. One of the best books I've read in a very, very long time' James O'Brien, LBC
'This is first class' The Times | 'Excellent' Spectator
'Exceptional' David McCloskey, author of The Seventh Floor
'A highly accomplished novel from a new writer of great promise' Financial Times
'Everything a John le Carré fan could ever wish for' Private Eye #1615
'A cracker of a debut novel which really does make clear what's been going on' Bill Nighy via The Rake
'Wonderful' Rory Stewart, co-host of The Rest is Politics podcast
‘A marvellously confident debut, sharply observed and exceptionally well written’ Charles Cumming, author of Box 88
Everyone knows about the Cambridge Spies from the Fifties, identified and broken up after passing national secrets to the Soviets for years. But no spy ring was ever unearthed at Oxford. Because one never existed? Or because it was never found…?
2022: Former spy Simon Sharman is eking out a living in the private sector. When a commission to delve into the financial dealings of a mysterious Russian oligarch comes across his desk, he jumps at the chance.
But as Simon investigates, worrying patterns begin to emerge. His subject made regular trips to Oxford, but for no apparent reason. There are payments from offshore accounts that suddenly just… stop.
Has he found what none of his former colleagues believed possible, a Russian spy ring now nestled at the heart of the British Establishment? Or is he just another paranoid ex-spook left out in the cold, obsessed with redemption?
From Oxford’s hallowed quadrangles to brush contacts on Hampstead Heath, agent-running in Vienna and mysterious meetings in Prague, A Spy Alone is a gripping international thriller and a searing portrait of modern Britain in the age of cynical populism. Perfect for readers of Charles Cumming, Mick Herron and John le Carré.
Praise for A Spy Alone
'Beaumont is at the forefront of the espionage genre, capturing the changing nature of intelligence: soft influence and business deals are overtaking stolen secrets; long-term insinuation is replacing Cold-War tradecraft. Brilliant' I. S. Berry, author of The Peacock and the Sparrow
'The best spy novel I’ve read for years... An astonishing debut... and a brilliant portrait of how Britain allowed Russia to game our recent politics, including with Brexit' Luke Harding, author of Invasion: Russia's Bloody War and Ukraine's Fight for Survival
'Wonderful. Beaumont finds a very moving place in the meditation between older ideas of patriotism and the new world. There are also eerie echoes of the Musk and Vance worldview in the villains, which give it a power and prescience' Rory Stewart, co-host of The Rest is Politics podcast
'Beaumont ... catches the zeitgeist of (le Carré) .... He conveys all the world of espionage with relish, in its murky motives and surveillance techniques and the book races along and makes for a stunning debut' Maxim Jakubowski, Crime Time
'A clever, thrilling spy story that brings the feel of Eric Ambler's shadowy political intrigues right into today's world' Jeremy Duns, author of Free Agent
‘Tense, compelling and remarkably timely... Shades of some of the greats of spy fiction – it might even be better than Charles Cumming’ Dominick Donald, author of Breathe
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
As a former MI6 field operative, author Charles Beaumont brings an uncommon level of real-life experience to his debut thriller A Spy Alone. The novel follows ex-spy Simon Sharman across several countries and decades, from his uni days at Oxford to today’s war-torn Ukraine. Simon may be relegated to the private sector now, but he is soon drawn into a tangled web of secrets that could finally prove the existence of a long-rumoured spy ring. Fans of Slow Horses (both the books and the TV series) should appreciate the elaborate plotting and lived-in characters on offer here, as well as the damning commentary on the contemporary state of British espionage and wider world affairs. All of that multi-tiered intrigue continues in A Spy at War, the next novel in this engrossing series.
Customer Reviews
Good read
After a slow start it develops into a good read, up to the minute plot, looking forward to the next in the series.
An excellent, and all too believable, spy thriller.
The book is fast paced, the plot very believable, the characters well created and well grounded. Events move quickly, there are good twists and I read it in about 2 days. I wish it had lasted longer! I look forward to the author’s next book. This Charles Beaumont is not to be confused with another author of the same name, as Apple Books appears to have done.
excellent
excellent work by an amazing author
thank you so much
Really good read