Cover Image: Dead Lions

Dead Lions

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Member Reviews

This is the second book in the ‘slow horse’ series and it was great to be back reading about the characters again, I’ve grown quite fond of them!

Another great storyline which was action packed and had lots going on. There was a twist with a character which has disappointed me as I was hoping to see what happened next but clearly it’s not meant to be.

I’m a fan of Mick Herrons writing style as it’s a fast paced read and I have a couple of laugh out loud moments usually courtesy of the main character Jackson Lamb.

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Even though I toiled through the first 60 pages of each Jackson Lamb thriller before giving up, I was unable to find them in any way gripping or amusing and liked neither the characters nor the plots. Unfortunately, I had requested all four books of this series at once and was kindly given free copies by netgalley in return for an honest review.

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Please see my review of Slow Horses, the first novel in the series about the inmates of Slough House.

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The Slow Horses, MI5 rejects sent to do pointless tasks in Slough House in the hope they’ll quit without revealing their mistakes to the wider world, are back for another entertaining spy thriller. Jackson Lamb is no George Smiley but he’s definitely someone you want to be put there doing his bit to keep us safe. Once again the suits are so busy stabbing each other in the back as they climb the greasy pole that they fail to notice the dangers around them and it’s left to Jackson and his crew to save us, this time it’s River’s arch enemy Spider who gets them embroiled with Russian gangsters in the hope that they’ll take the blame for anything that goes wrong while he gets the credit for what goes right. With Lamb in charge, no chance of that, as long as he can control his flatulence long enough to organise his staff! ! Looking forward to reading the next one, luckily I came to the series late so there are a few already waiting for me. Thank you to netgalley for sending me this copy in exchange for an honest review.

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I am working my way through the Jackson Lamb series on track to London Rules, number 5 of this non-stop adventure ride. Having loved the first book, Slow Horses, I believe Dead Lions, the follow-up, is even better! Such strong, smart and flawed characters are every reader's dream. You cannot help but feel jealous of the knowledge and skill Jackson and his compatriots weld with such blasé disregard, but, to super cool effect. Old school cold war tactics are making a big comeback and this is the place to enjoy it in all it's splendor!

I dare not speak a word of the contents of this novel and it is best experienced firsthand. I am loving it and cannot get enough. This is a treat I fully endorse with all my energy. I hope you love it just as much.

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A great follow up to the superbly original ‘Slow Horses’.

The introduction of a few new characters, with a few new great back stories. Unfortunately a few less characters as well, but all in the name of great story. Add to the mix a poetic opening and closing (If cats and mice can be poetic), the same dose of dark humour, and the fostering of the steadfast protagonists and we end up with another great read!

Thank you NetGalley and John Murray Press for a review copy.

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Won’t be reading this so unable to provide any sort of review but would not recommend this author to anyone, sorry, just too dull!

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Thank you to NetGalley, John Murray Press and Mike Herron ARC of Dead Lions in return for my honest review.

This is the second novel I have read by this author and I read it straight after the first one. Again, it centres on Slough House, which is where all ‘failed’ agents go to carry out the more minor chores as they have already messed up on at least one job. They all want to get back into the mainstream action so when an old spy is found dead away from his usual location they uncover long gone secrets relating to the Cold War.

I found it quirky and witty. Recommended.

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Washed-up and hung out to dry, ex-spies are sent to Slough House. The leader of this sorry gang is Lamb, a thoroughly unkempt, ill-mannered and obnoxious boss. But, with the help of his band of operatives, a little bit of luck and plenty of humour, he gets things done that MI5 can't. Loved it. Will read the series.

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This is the 2nd book in the Slough House series by author Mick Herron.
I appear to be in the minority but I personally struggled to connect with this novel and found it hard work. Thankfully for the author there are plenty of people who disagree with me but an honest review is what I promised.
Slough House is where all failed MI5 spies go to carry out trivial chores because they have messed up on the job. One thing they all have in common, though, is they all want to be back in the action. When an old Cold War-era spy is found dead on a bus outside Oxford, far from his usual haunts. The despicable, irascible Jackson Lamb is convinced Dickie Bow was murdered. The agents uncover a shadowy tangle of ancient Cold War secrets that seem to lead back to a man named Alexander Popov, who is either a Soviet bogeyman or the most dangerous man in the world.
I liked the idea of failed spies trying to resurrect their careers and there were some very promising characters in the book, but maybe a few too many to keep track of. I am not put off easily and will try another one in the series and who knows I may be converted.

I would like to thank Net Galley and John Murray Press for supplying a copy of this novel in exchange for an honest review.

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London's Slough House is where washed-up MI5 spies go to while away what's left of their failed careers. But now the 'slow horses' have a chance at redemption.
An old Cold War-era spy is found dead on a bus outside Oxford, far from his usual haunts. As the agents dig into their fallen comrade's circumstances, they uncover a shadowy tangle of ancient secrets that seems to lead back to a man named Alexander Popov, and a decades-old conspiracy with a brand-new target: London's newest, tallest skyscraper.
I found the plot to be very implausible & again found the characters to be lukewarm. I enjoyed ‘Slow Horses’ but found this even harder going but I did persevere even though I found myself skimming some pages, the plot did pick up , just a case of sticking with it

My honest review is for a special copy I voluntarily read

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Sadly I was not able to really get into these, lauded though they have been. The odd quirky character is fine but going OTT on the bizarre characters filling this ensemble detracted from what could have been a great plot, really contemporary.

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Another quirky spy tale with the wonderful Jackson Lambe leading the cast of disparate souls. Is there a plot to bring down a Shardlike building in the city by Russian sleeper cells or something other. All is revealed in a barnstorming finale...good fun!

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Great read, second in series lives up to the first.

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Hi Karen,
My next review is:-
"Dead Lions:Jackson Lamb 2", written by Mick Herron and published in paperback by John Murray 8 Sept. 2016. 352 pages. ISBN-13: 978-1473641112

Jackson Lamb is the obnoxious protagonist of these books. He is constantly farting in mixed company and exhibiting so many other nasty personal habits that his flatulence seems the least of his problems , yet he is the one in charge at Slough House!

Suppose you are an agent in MI5, but you mess up a case, or you have an affair, or you become alcoholic, or leave top secret files on a bus or you are otherwise no longer suitable to be an active agent so what happens? Then as a misfit you are transported from Regent's Park, where the MI5 Head Quarters is, and are sent across the river to Slough House where you will be allotted simple, but extremely repetitious and boring clerical tasks in the hope that you will get the message and voluntarily resign. However, a lot of the people in Slough House, who are described as "slow horses" need the money it pays to meet their mortgage commitments etc and so put up with the terrible conditions in the vain hope that sometime in the distant future they will get the opportunity to go back once more to active duty with MI5 at Regent's Park.

This amazing book which was the winner of the 2013 CWA Gold Dagger Award seems to stagger from event to event with no apparently real plot but building up the back stories of the characters which we first met in the previous book, until it speeds up when you get to the final chapter. It packs a lot of very dry humour into it's pages often of the sort that stops you from reading it in public on the underground as you may be embarrassed by breaking into laughter.

Although the story takes place at the present moment with references to terrorism and the far right the inhabitants of Slough House seem to live in the past as there are few references to modern technology and it reminded me of books that I read many years ago by such authors as John Le Carre which seem to be contemporary to this story.

I have read the authors first book (Slow Horses:Jackson Lamb 1) in this series and also his third (Real Tigers:Jackson Lamb 3) and enjoyed them tremendously as I did this one which ironed out the missing gaps in my knowledge of the Slough House stories.

I look forward to reading more from this very talented and unusual writer. Recommended.

Terry
(To be published in due course on eurocrime.co.uk)

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