The next instalment of the Liz Carlyle series: a pacy, intelligent espionage thriller from the woman with true insider knowledge
Dame Stella Rimington joined the Security Service (MI5) in 1968. During her career she worked in all the main fields of the Service: counter-subversion, counter-espionage and counter-terrorism. She was appointed Director General in 1992, the first woman to hold the post. She has written her autobiography and seven Liz Carlyle novels. She lives in London and Norfolk.
She bids to join the ranks of such secret-agent authors as Somerset
Maugham, Graham Greene and John le Carré
*Wall Street Journal*
A wealth of persuasive detail, obviously drawn from first-hand
experience
*Marie Claire*
This is something rare: the spy novel that prizes authenticity over
fabrication that is true to the character and spirit of
intelligence work
*Mail on Sunday*
For a pacy page-turner, she's a safe bet . . . Rimington is
particularly strong in her accounts of procedure, unsurprisingly,
given her past role as Head of MI5
*Independent*
Faster than Le Carré, she creates the same sense of real characters
struggling with real problems
*John Sandford*
Rimington’s best work demonstrates a flair for narrative, with a
sense of authenticity and an insider’s grasp on the pressing issues
of the day
*Washington Post*
Liz Carlyle is an MI5 agent with the traditional thriller-heroine
mix of dysfunctional personal life and steely ambition
*Daily Telegraph*
Rich with authentic details from Rimington's own life as director
general of MI5, this is a must-read for fans of contemporary spy
fiction
*Publishers Weekly*
Rimington is a fine storyteller who creates instantly believable
characters living in an extraordinary world
*Bella*
Liz Carlyle remains one of the most interesting characters in the
male-dominated world of the spy thriller
*Daily Express*
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