Slough House is seventh in the reject spies series by Mick Herron and it has a feel of being the last. There’s a circling of long-running threads and answers to questions still left hanging. But don’t be fooled as I was, eighth title Bad Actors continues the story after this book.
The employees at Slough House may all be working there after banishment from MI5’s headquarters at Regent’s Park after some failure, misdemeanour or personal lapse, but beneath the surface they are all still spies. Some more capable than others. Some socially dysfunctional, some simply irritating. But when a couple notice they are being tailed, they take remedial action. Boss Jackson Lamb, who may daily deride, insult and openly mock his staff, will not stand for them – and the institution that is Slough House – being threatened. Lamb’s past experience as an active ‘joe’ means he knows all the tricks, he knows everyone, and he never forgets.
‘Lady Di’ Taverner, first desk at Regent’s Park, approved an off-the-books revenge attack on a Russian citizen in Russia for a nasty attack in the UK using a deadly nerve agent. Was she brave, morally correct, or politically naive? Who knows what she did? Who has she sold her soul to? And why is a team of her Park trainees now following the Slough House spies? Are the two things connected.
As always, Lamb [and Herron] walk a perilously thin line between insult and offence, Lamb’s language and behaviour is chosen to distract, offend, deter, antagonise, chasten and occasionally to motivate. Always, the story is about power. Who has it, who wants it, who is abusing it.
Slimy politician now PR Peter Judd joins a handful of newcomers including a bereaved dwarf seeking justice for his murdered partner, a loud-mouthed street protestor and an arrogant ambitious news producer. All have skin in the game. Can Lady Di handle the toxic mess she’s created, and will Jackson Lamb circle the wagons or attack his boss?
Herron’s not afraid to endanger and kill favourite characters. Or to bring back familiar faces. This series is a satirical account of our times, most certainly not politically correct, and should be re-read and enjoyed again from the beginning. Read Slough House and lose yourself in an excellent story, but read novels 1-6 first.
Click the title to read my reviews of the previous books in the Slough House series:-
SLOW HORSES #1SLOUGHHOUSE
DEAD LIONS #2SLOUGHHOUSE
REAL TIGERS #3SLOUGHHOUSE
SPOOK STREET #4SLOUGHHOUSE
LONDON RULES #5SLOUGHHOUSE
JOE COUNTRY #6SLOUGHHOUSE
BAD ACTORS BY MICK HERRON #8SLOUGHHOUSE
If you like this, try:-
‘The Farm’ by Tom Rob Smith
‘The Fine Art of Invisible Detection’ by Robert Goddard
‘Never’ by Ken Follett
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