About this deal
Others got in the way of an ambitious colleague and had the rug pulled from under their feet. All have one thing in common: they all want to be back in the action and they'll do anything to get there, even if it means actually cooperating. Mon: closedTue: 10am-6pmWed: 10am-6pmThu: 10am-9pmFri: 10am-9pmSat: 10am-6pm 71 Balham High Road, Balham, SW12 9AP Maybe they just got too dependent on the bottle.
Reviews
George P. Wood
Webb thinks the oligarch can be recruited as an agent of influence. When Dickie Bow dies at the back of a bus, everyone assumes the old alcoholic shuffled off this mortal coil naturally.
It’s a five-star page-turner for me. And he left a one-word message in the drafts folder of his cellphone: “cicadas,” a reference to rumored Soviet sleeper cells in England’s green and pleasant land. Definitely recommended! MI5 long ago dismissed the rumor, but Lamb thinks it’s worth looking into.
Bow used to be a “streetwalker” (i. Jackson Lamb isn’t so sure, however. And if you’re interested, Apple TV adapted this novel for Season 2 of its Slow Horses series. Dead Lions is an excellent successor to Slow Horses.
, personal surveillance) for MI5 in Berlin before the Wall came down, after all. What’s he hiding? As Lamb investigates Bow’s death, and as Guy and Harper draw closer to the date of Webb’s meeting with the oligarch, their separate plotlines begin to converge, leaving readers wondering who’s conning whom, and to what end.
Weirdly, however, MI5—as represented by the scheming James “Spider” Webb—has seconded two Slough House denizens, Louisa Guy and Min Harper, to run security for a meeting with a visiting Russian oligarch who has his sights on the Kremlin. And from whom? But the secondment is weird because (a) security is a job for the Dogs, not the Slow Horses, and (b) Webb hasn’t been forthright about this meeting with his boss, Diana Taverner.