Cover Image: London Rules

London Rules

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Member Reviews

With the latest in the Slow Horses series, Mick Herron shows no sign of slowing down the pace or narrowing the scope of his novels.  Not as many new characters as previous books allows us to dig deeper into the ones we know and love.  I am still excited by Jackson Lamb, and his band of misfits, as they try to prevent tragedy occurring, at the same time as trying to remain under the radar of the security service.
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Mick Herron's continuing saga of the Slow Horses headed by Jackson Lamb that foul mouth sarcastic dishevelled intelligence officer of the failed brigade.
Uncouth Jackson Lamb might be but something in his disgusting humour gives it that humour that makes him a little bit likeable.
This fifth novel in the series is as good as the rest fast a bit quirky ,different but eminently readable. 
Cannot wait for the next edition .
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If you are interested in a 'spies, terrorists and traitors-type' novel, this would be for you. There are some excellent central characters, most notably Lamb, who is visually demanding to imagine. The opening gets the book off to a robust start,  which then peters into a slower meander. For all that, the storyline requires focus, the interplay of characters absorbing and the outcome, perhaps unexpected!
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This is a really odd book. I can't decide whether it is utterly brilliant, or  complete farce. Or chillingly realistic. I think I'm siding towards a preference and I'm intrigued enough by the totally unique writing style to want to read another book. Like nothing I've ever read before.
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https://www.librarything.com/work/20604801
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Couldn't follow the story, lost track of who was who but it was laugh out loud funny! 

4 stars
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Mick Herron just gets better and better, a five star read.
The character development is superb, are they heroes, villains or just plain Joes, the storyline takes the reader through mystery, suspense, humour and as always a who done it.
A must read, I can't wait for the next adventure of Jackson Lamb and his crew.
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This is the latest of the Jackson Lamb series.   I have now read all five and can call myself truly hooked.  My preferred book is the fourth, Spook Street, but books 2-5 all build and improve on the first book Slow Horses.  After my interest was piqued by Slow Horses I have enjoyed the books not only because of their excellent stories and plots but because of the bizarre characters.  The books are genuinely funny.  The characters change through the series for various reasons but this adds sufficient interest with enough characters running through for the reader to feel comrotable.  All the characters are well developed, I won't call them realistic because that is a stretch too far but they are the product of an ingenious mind.  I have learnt to love to hate Jackson Lamb.  Whilst the main plot is for me secondary to the characters I still want a really good story and this is what we get.  This particular book is a story of political intrigue featuring an uptodate plot featuring the Islamist.  I could not put it down, I hope there is more to follow.
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I read very slowly trying to savor this, the most current book in the Slough House series, for as long as possible. As much as I want to catch up, and be current, I dread the wait for book 6. Fingers crossed the wait isn't too long, eh?

London Rules, like all its predecessors, is a great read. It starts off relatively peacefully, like any run of the mill day but ramps up quickly as events take shape. The Slough House crew, having suffered a loss in the previous book, rally around to support an unlikely target within their ranks. As is the way, one thing leads to another and the team are in hot water on a number of fronts. It takes a bit of Jackson Lamb magic to extricate them along with help found from unexpected, rather unwilling, allies. 

What makes this series such a gem for me is the high level of sarcasm. It comes fast and furious and brings a smile to my face. Sharp wit humanizes even the fierce Lady Di. I also enjoy the back-stabbing treachery that takes place in the political realm, and at The Park, and seeing how that ripples down to affect River, Louisa, Catherine, Shirley, Coe and even Roddy, bless his silly little heart. I'm loving the addition of head Dog Emma Flyte and Welles, her right hand man. This book just feels so well rounded regarding characters. So many diverging points of power, intelligence and intrigue make a meaty story that is sure to impress. And, with Jackson Lamb maneuvering in his stealthy, uncouth manner things are bound to work out...right?
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I had the pleasure of being able to read this entire great series on the trot (see what I did there).
London Rules was another great addition to the Slough House series we have come to love. It has come to a point where I feel a connection with all the characters (and I’m a little concerned to say that about our friend JK Coe). So much so that I feel a little sad to have to say goodbye until book 6 arrives.

Thank you NetGalley and Mick Herron for a review copy.
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What a great series that has grown on me with each new book. I enjoyed the first one; I thought the story was interesting but wasn’t sure what to make of the characters. Having just read the rest of the series back to back, I surprisingly find that I’m really rooting for the slow horses. The slow revelation of each of their back stories is cleverly done. Their ability to attract disaster and exacerbate said disaster is second to none. The verbal sparring is razor sharp and some of the one-liners are hilarious. Maybe a bit too much information about Lamb’s digestive system, but this seemed to be less apparent by the fifth book. Looking forward to the next instalment, although I am worried who will be killed off next.
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This is the fifth book of a series that keeps getting better. I love the personification of dawn at the beginning of the book and dusk at the end, The story once again revolves around a crisis for MI5 which a group of incompetent agents working out of Slough House become involved in. Roderick Ho is such a splendidly awful person but you can rally imagine knowing him and the other characters, all of whom occasionally have good ideas but have too many character flaws to ever do anything really useful. They are saved from themselves by the foul but brilliant Jackson Lamb who always seems to outwit people whilst being too unhealthy from self inflicted vices to get up out of his chair. The mistake made by River and the newcomer Coe beats everything so far. There are also definite nods to current political characters which made me smile and despair equally.
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The latest instalment in Mick Herron’s Slough House series of novels sees the author on great form once again. 

In London Rules, the country is being rocked by a series of terror attacks and once again it falls to Jackson Lamb and his team at Slough House (a branch of the secret service reserved for no hopers) to try to save the day.  The book sees the return of a number of characters from previous books, including politicians and the secret service, and while it isn’t necessary to have read them all in order it would help a reader to fully understand the characters and their motives.  The plot ticks along at a rapid pace, with plenty of action, politics, double crossing and surprises, and while (as in some of the previous books) the bad guys’ plan does stretch credibility, the book is so much fun that it doesn’t matter at all.  

The Slough House books would probably be classed as spy thrillers but that doesn’t fully do justice to the witty narrative and laugh out loud one liners that run throughout. 

In Jackson Lamb the author has created a wonderful character that, for me, is equally as funny as Reginald Hill’s Dalziel and, on television, Gene Hunt.  Although he is central to the stories the other characters are great, have their own sub plots, and all play their parts well – as an aside the author seems happy to kill off recurring characters so you never get the impression that they are all guaranteed to make it to the end of the story.  

In summary I would recommend this book to anyone.  The biggest compliment I can pay is that having started reading I was still going well past midnight and wasn’t prepared to stop until I got to the end.  Great stuff and look forward to the next one.
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Oh my goodness i have loved this series of not-quite-what-you-expect spy thrillers!  So much so that I read the entire series back to back and had a full day of mourning that there weren't more already written.

Our motley crew of broken and battered spies and Service support staff once again find themselves in the middle of an operation that they have no business being involved in - well,, if it weren't for the fact that one of their own has been targeted - by both sides.  

The truly horrible, yet mesmerizing, Jackson Lamb, who oversees Slough House and its rejected inhabitants, knows how to break a rule or two, and always has his team's backs, even when they do really stupid things.  He is rapidly becoming my favourite anti-hero, with all his disgusting habits simply adding to the mystery of his past.  I hope we learn more of him as Herron develops the series.

Each character is so well constructed there's a real feeling of loss when any are killed and pleasure when they succeed.  I can't wait to see how each of them fulfill their roles going forward.

A great series, easy to read and all to easy to become completely addicted too. Herron, you owe me at least a night's sleep!
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Funny in places with plenty of action. A good read.
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I think it does help if you've read the other four books fin this series (Slow Horses, Dead Lions, Real Tigers and Spook Street, in that order) before you start London Rules, as they establish the characters and the relationships between over the course of the series and if you read the later ones first there are spoilers for things that happen in the earlier books, but it's not absolutely essential.

To briefly recap, the series is about a group of MI5 agents - 'slow horses' who, for various reasons ranging from terrible mistakes made in the field to addictions and mental health problems, have been shunted off to a grim satellite office and given menial, routine tasks to do because they can't be trusted on the frontline. Their boss is Cold War veteran Jackson Lamb, a shambling slob who knows too much to be pensioned off.

Lamb himself remains an absolute gift of a character. Deliberately obnoxious, lacking in personal hygiene and excessively flatulent, he is nonetheless exceptionally sharp and exceptionally dangerous. Lamb is perhaps at his most appalling in this instalment of the series, but this only makes him more entertaining. As in previous books, there are revelations about his past that help us to understand how he remains not only employed but also alive, but we sense there's still an awful lot about Lamb that we don't know. We do know he used to be an undercover agent, or 'joe', and it's never quite clear how much of what we see is the real Jackson Lamb and how much is simply another cover - perhaps Lamb no longer knows either.

The plot of London Rules centres around a series of terror attacks - which, of course, Lamb's 'slow horses' aren't allowed anywhere near; while their colleagues at the Service HQ are investigating they're left to do things like trawl through library records to see who's been borrowing books about Islam. But then one of their number, charmless computer hacker Roderick Ho, is almost assassinated. More suspicious than that, though, is the fact that he seems to have a girlfriend, and when the slow horses set out to find out why on earth Ho might be a target, they become embroiled in something far, far bigger.

There are a lot of surprises in the plot and our expectations are constantly subverted, even within the first few pages. It's also topical and laced with biting political satire - Brexit, Islamophobia, the rise of populism and 'controversial' right-wing columnists are just a few of the topics that Herron tackles, and for all its gritty atmosphere and tension, London Rules is often exceptionally funny - the humour definitely increases as this series progresses. The dialogue is witty and sharp yet somehow feels credible too. And although all the Jackson Lamb books are based in London, as the title suggests this one feels much more rooted in the city - despite a great deal of the real action taking place elsewhere, London feels as much like a stalwart supporting character as it does a setting. 

Then there's the Intelligence Service itself, depicted not so much an organisation as a world in its own right with its own history and folklore - as the author says, "There's nothing Spook Street enjoys more than a legend, unless it's a myth", and in this regard Herron is as skilled a world-builder as any writer of fantasy or sci-fi. 

This series seems to be getting stronger and stronger, and despite the wit, there's an encroaching darkness at the end of London Rules which suggests the next book could, for Lamb, be the most dangerous yet. I can't wait.
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I found this quite difficult to get involved in the story. I don’t know if I would recommend the book but suggest others read it to decide for themselves.
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A group of gunmen drive into a rural English village and go on a shooting spree. Various other terrorist outrages follow. Meanwhile, in the aftermath of the Brexit referendum, the populist MP who led the Brexit charge is looking to usurp the Prime Minister, while a Muslim politician with the popular touch is looking to become Mayor of a major city in the West Midlands - but does he have something to hide?

This is the fifth in Herron’s  series of satirical spy thrillers based around the activities of the slow horses of Slough House. I’ve read all the previous novels int he series, though this is just the second I’ve reviewed. It can be read as a standalone, though reading the series is so much better. The novels centre around Slough House, a satellite station of MI5 where the Service’s misfits and disgraced members - so called Slow Horses - are sent to serve out their time until they retire or resign. Lording it all over them is Jackson Lamb, an overweight, flatulent bully of a man, albeit one who deep down cares for his underlings. The Slow Horses themselves are a selection of well-drawn characters, who the author imbues with individual character flaws and foibles. Each is loveable and repellent in his or her own way.

Once more, the Slow Horses are thrust into the centre of things, becoming embroiled in the various strands of the plot.  As with the previous books it’s all good fun, though once again the plot is rather weak. It’s something I’ve noticed about this series of novels, the plots are pretty forgettable. What makes the books enjoyable and well worth reading are the character’s antics and the fact that this is subtle satire; it’s not laugh out loud funny, but it makes the intelligence services and the whole war on terror seem slightly ridiculous. As with all the best satire this is subversive stuff and one can’t help but wonder how accurate it might be- after all, while most of what the intelligence services get up to is hidden from view, what little gets into the public domain isn’t always so complementary and the spies aren’t strangers to blunder.

4 out of 5 stars
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Brilliantly and darkly funny. Mick Herron’s writing is an utter joy. His perfectly constructed sentences remind me at times of Graham Greene or even Dickens.
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This series just gets better and better. Mick Herron has excelled himself with this latest chapter in the chronicles of life in Slough House. A terrific read!
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