Gerald Seymour spent fifteen years as an international television news reporter with ITN, covering Vietnam and the Middle East, and specialising in the subject of terrorism across the world. Seymour was on the streets of Londonderry on the afternoon of Bloody Sunday, and was a witness to the massacre of Israeli athletes at the Munich Olympics. Gerald Seymour exploded onto the literary scene with the massive bestseller Harry's Game, that has since been picked by the Sunday Times as one of the 100 best thrillers written since 1945. He has been a full-time writer since 1978, and six of his novels have been filmed for television in the UK and US. The Foot Soldiers is his thirty-eighth novel.
A cleverly nuanced climax in which tables are unexpectedly turned
more than once . . . marks this as a novel of real quality. Top
brass
*The Times*
Seymour's finger is always on the current socio-political pulse,
and the new book is a welcome return for his curmudgeonly MI5 man
Jonas Merrick
*i news*
This is multi-layered spy-fi at its best, with Seymour showing that
even after thirty-seven novels he has lost none of his talent for
thrilling plots and creating credible and sympathetic characters,
nor his journalist's eye for modern espionage tradecraft and
techniques
*Shots Magazine*
Supreme spy writer
*Peterborough Telegraph*
If le Carré had written about spies on the front line . . . Seymour
makes more than le Carré of treachery's potential impact on
frontline personnel. [A] masterly novel
*The Sunday Times*
There are strong echoes of George Smiley in Merrick's mild and
unprepossessing manner, which disguises a razor-sharp brain and
considerable courage when necessary
*Financial Times*
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