Mick Herron is the author of the bestselling Slough House novels, which have won two CWA Daggers, been published in 20 languages, and are the basis of a major forthcoming TV series starring Gary Oldman as Jackson Lamb. He is also the author of the Zoe Boehm series, and the standalone novels Reconstruction and This is What Happened. Mick was born in Newcastle upon Tyne, and now lives in Oxford.
Herron's Slough House novels are the finest new crime series this
Millennium . . . Funny and thrilling in equal measure, Real Tigers
is an absolute joy
*Mail on Sunday*
Satire, verbal sparring and gunfights are deftly combined in an
excellently written novel permeated by Herron's sly, dry and very
English sense of humour - rather as if Philip Larkin or Alan
Bennett had had a go at spy fiction
*Sunday Times*
Real Tigers has revitalised the spy thriller genre
*Sunday Express*
In the grand tradition of British espionage writing: no 007-style
mayhem, but a narrative involving rogue agents and a kidnapped spy
that is both sardonically funny and pleasingly complex
*Independent*
A pulsating spy thriller
*Daily Express*
The great spy novelists - Ambler, Greene, le Carré, Deighton - pull
off the difficult double act of showing that the business of
espionage is simultaneously deadly serious and highly risible:
office politics on a grand scale. These writers, without
downplaying the dangers of spying, refuse to take the spies as
seriously as they take themselves. They have a kindred spirit in
Mick Herron . . . There is a near-constant stream of crackling,
scabrous dialogue . . . Herron's casual observations are
beautifully phrased . . . With his poet's eye for detail, his comic
timing and relish for violence, Herron fills a gap that has been
yawning ever since Len Deighton retired
*Daily Telegraph*
A masterful third spy novel from the gifted Herron . . . He has
been published only by an American firm until now, in spite of the
fact that he is British and his stories are set in this country.
Now, all three books appear here, and Herron will, at last, receive
the recognition that his talent richly deserves . . . Deliciously
tongue-in-cheek and with a striking serpentine construction, it is
a thriller that moves Herron close to the class of Graham
Greene
*Daily Mail*
The Slough House series of which Real Tigers is the third
instalment, is surely among the finest British spy fiction of the
past 20 years. Where Mick Herron's contemporaries stumble through
thickets of cliché, his fiction feels fresh and real . . . a
narrative of breathtaking ingenuity. Brilliant
*Metro*
Herron, like all good novelists, manufactures his own form of
reality and persuades his readers to subscribe to it. The satire is
streaked with violence, which itself has elements of visual comedy.
The dialogue is sharp and the prose is dark and sardonic.
Underlying everything is a sense of outrage about the corruption
within the Establishment. This is not the sort of novel where
you're likely to find positive portraits of Old Etonians. But if
you read one spy novel this year, read Real Tigers. Better still,
read the whole series
*The Spectator*
All the action you might want from an espionage thriller is to be
found in Real Tigers, with betrayal, double-dealing and a
fantastically violent climax in an underground facility but the
true pleasures of Mick Herron's Gold Dagger-winning Slough House
series lie elsewhere: in the sharp wit and dry irony and elegant
grace of the prose, the razor-sharp characterisation; and above
all, the authorial overview: sophisticated and intelligent,
satirical but never tipping into pastiche . . . Think Le Carré with
fewer posh people and laugh-out-loud funny. Mick Herron is the real
deal
*Irish Times*
This third Slough House novel proves Herron has the comedy and eye
to rival Len Deighton
*Sunday Telegraph*
What a find! It is the third in a series of witty, cynical and
immensely original books . . . The story, though good is not the
main reason to read this book. Rather, it is its elegant style,
original viewpoint, dry wit and spring-to-life characters, some
recognisable. I think Herron's is the next big name in crime
fiction
*Literary Review*
Probably the best literary spy fiction you'll read this year
*Choice*
Both sardonically funny and pleasingly complex
*i*
Authentic espionage thriller
*Sun*
I absolutely loved Real Tigers. It's a decidedly British spy novel
written with distinctly American noir panache. Herron has a natural
talent for creating and portraying characters that are instantly
understandable, relatable, and more than occasionally despicable. A
real treat
*Roger Hobbs, author of GHOSTMAN*
Beautiful, wicked writing married to a wonderful black cynicism.
You won't want to think the world works like this but Herron's
version is horribly persuasive
*Harry Bingham, author of THIS THING OF DARKNESS*
Damn it, this man's good. This is the espionage game stripped of
its posturing and played out without a James Bond or a Jason Bourne
in sight, but with a keener wit, a telling conscience, and better
jokes. I loved it
*Helen Giltrow, author of THE DISTANCE*
This tale of rogue spies is brilliantly written, excellently
plotted and darkly funny. One of the best crime novels of the
year
*Martyn Waites, author of THE MERCY SEAT*
Sizzlingly stylish, ferociously funny and fiercely intelligent,
Mick Herron has managed to breathe new life into the spy novel.
With its deft, elaborate plotting and brilliantly flawed
characters, Real Tigers is a one hell of a ride
*Stav Sherez, author of ELEVEN DAYS*
In Real Tigers, Mick Herron has crafted a truly standout spy
thriller. Witty, urbane, filled with acute observations, endlessly
quotable lines and a cast of wonderfully jaded agents who I look
forward to spending time with for many more books to come. An utter
delight
*Chris Ewan, author of SAFE HOUSE*
The disgraced spies at MI5's Slough House must try to save one of
their own in CWA Gold Dagger Award-winner Herron's outstanding
third thriller featuring uncouth Jackson Lamb and crew . . . Herron
expertly juggles multiple plot lines and fully formed characters,
injecting everything with a jolt of black humour
*Publisher's Weekly*
The latest instalment in the eventful days and sleepless nights of
the denizens of Slough House is another sheer delight . . . Herron
wonderfully blends the thriller element and the humane as he
orchestrates a most complex but believable plot like a watchmaker.
At times darkly hilarious, at others gripping and intense, this
confirms Herron and his series as a future classic. Get onboard
now
*lovereading*
[A] twisted tale of real intelligence . . . Herron's second Slough
House book, Dead Lions was the Crime Writers' Association's Novel
of the Year in 2013 but it, and he, remained under the radar. With
this new work, the third in the series, he's unlikely to stay a
secret for much longer
*Esquire*
CWA Goldsboro Gold Dagger Winner, Mick Herron employs a quick
filmic cross-cutting method in the third of his Slough House series
. . . If Herron could manipulate the Service the way he has
constructed Real Tigers many of us might feel more secure about the
future. In the meantime, quake
*Shots*
Herron has written another cracker. He won the CWA Goldsboro Gold
Dagger in 2013 for Dead Lions, and it's not too much of a stretch
of the imagination to think he might win it again. All the things
that made the other books in the series such a success are present
again. Machiavellian plotting, sly humour, characters so
compromised but so well-drawn you won't be sure if he wants them to
win or lose, and topical satire - this time the thorny issue of
extraordinary rendition. All in all Real Tigers is another dazzling
effort and I can't wait to read what Mick Herron writes next
*Crime Fiction Lover*
Simply loved love the writing style, particularly the narrator's
occasional asides that are wry, humorous and more than once make
you giggle with their sharp, dry wit. I will, however, say that in
common with all the other Slough House novels, it's a genuine
rollercoaster of a ride and best of all Heron has no qualms about
body count and killing off established characters, so expect to
squeal occasionally and gasp "No!!!" when a body turns up
*crimewarp.co.uk*
It is impossible not to be impressed by Herron's use of language.
He is able to express himself so neatly and frequently presents the
reader with epigrammatic comments . . . a thoroughly entertaining
tale
*Crime Review*
Combines the spy thriller with farce in a manner befitting a
country that puts Coco the Clown in charge of the Secret
Intelligence Service
*Evening Standard*
Cleverly plotted and beautifully written
*Daily Record*
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