Author:Andy McNab
Out here, the cold isn't the only killer.
Nick Stone is suffering. The two people he cared for most are gone.
Desperate for the chance to escape his misery, Stone heads north at the summons of his old SAS officer. Five ex-servicemen, badly wounded in Afghanistan, need his back-up for a trek to the North Pole.
They meet at the world’s most northerly airport where the polar bear threat makes it illegal not to carry a gun. But it doesn’t take long for Stone and his men to discover that the most dangerous predators in this part of the world walk on two legs, not four.
The coldest war of all is just beginning and Stone needs to pick a side.
Another rip-roaring read that fans will devour.
—— SunDonna Leon’s recreation of Venice and her depiction of the series’ core characters … is, as always in this long-running series, a triumph.
—— Literary ReviewLeon has done for Venice what Morse did for Oxford, or Aurelio Zen for Rome … Leon is a wonderful writer, the sentences as beautifully crafted as the puparin Casati’s father had long ago built.
—— The Arts DeskThe latest - and 26th - instalment in the best-selling Commissario Brunetti series will not need any recommendation for those familiar with Leon’s accomplished detective series.
—— RTÉ GuideI sometimes find it difficult to review Donna Leon's books with any original comment as they are consistently good. However, this is an excellent example and as with all her other books I have read, comes highly recommended.
—— CrimesquadDonna Leon’s novels reflect the true nature of life.
—— FromFirstPageToLastThe huge number of readers who are devoted to the work of the late Henning Mankell will find in this, his last novel, all the characteristics they value: the observant descriptions of the minutiae of daily life, the gentle melancholy, the careful analysis of relationships (especially between fathers and daughters) and, above all, the inevitability of loneliness and loss
—— Literary ReviewThis profoundly gloomy yet ultimately hopeful novel – the last from the late grand master of Scandinavian noir – revolves around discovering who could have been responsible for this senseless crime
—— John Williams , Mail on SundayThis final novel from Mankell (the Kurt Wallander series), posthumously published in a stunning English translation, questions what happens to a person who has lost everything—and who considers himself too old to rebuild... It’s a skillfully told, exquisitely structured story filled with sharp insights into human nature and unflinching examinations of the complex relationships to which people bind themselves in order to feel a little bit less alone.
—— Publishers WeeklyA bracing look at a twilight year in the life of an old man who, when confronted daily by perfectly good reasons for giving up altogether, doesn’t so much rise above as plow stoically through them.
—— Kirkus ReviewsLovely… Elegiac and steeped in the emptiness of the Swedish landscape
—— Claire Allfree , MetroElegiac and melancholic.
—— Bethanne Patrick , Washington PostWe are back in the more interesting territory of moral uncertainty and failure. What, Smiley asks, was he fighting for?
—— TLSThe literary event of the Autumn
—— Evening StandardI have re-read The Spy Who Came In From The Cold over and over again since I first encountered it in my teens, just to remind myself how extraordinary a work of fiction can be
—— Malcolm GladwellHe can communicate emotion, from sweating fear to despairing love, with terse and compassionate conviction. Above all, he can tell a tale. Formidable equipment for a rare and disturbing writer
—— Sunday TimesThe best spy story I have ever read
—— Graham Greene on The Spy Who Came In From The ColdA literary master for a generation
—— ObserverGeorge Smiley is our favourite fictional spy
—— Sunday Expressle Carré has made and peopled a myth. Myths do not age
—— Financial TimesDeeply moving in its portrait of a man adrift in a climate he no longer understands
—— Metro[As] labyrinthine as you'd expect ... le Carré has always been a master
—— The TabletRazor-sharp insight from the battle-weary Guillam and fascinating glimpses into the murky spycraft at the height of the Cold War only add to the joy of this sublimely accomplished thriller
—— The PeopleThis is a truly wonderful, morally complex, politically astute novel written with elegance and panache . . . the visceral thrill of its twists and its complexities, its edge-of-the-seat qualities
—— Scotland on Sunday[Le Carré's] writing has lost none of its pith or potency . . . his powers of invention have kept up with the pace of an ever-changing and complex world'
—— The ScotsmanThrilling and fascinating - a satisfying close to the saga
—— The IndependentThis sublime thriller
—— Sunday MirrorThis really is vintage le Carré
—— Mail on SundayIt's brilliantly done and very enjoyable
—— Prospect[A] late-career triumph
—— 1843 MagazineA splendid novel
—— Sunday TimesAn immensely clever piece of novelistic engineering
—— GuardianAli Land's Good Me Bad Me is an intensely compelling exploration of nature versus nurture wrapped up in a page-turning psychological thriller. Darkly disturbing and beautifully written. What more could any reader want?
—— Sarah PinboroughGood Me Bad Me is an astonishing debut - technically sophisticated and emotionally heart wrenching. So many things are done well - the status jungle of girls school, the psychological dissonance of a dysfunctional family, the internal machinery of damaged children. I thought it was wonderful
—— Helen Callaghan, bestselling author of , Dear AmyOne word: Wow. What a brilliant book - believable, shocking, thought-provoking and utterly compelling. The writing, as well as being so pacey, is beautiful. This feels such a current and original book
—— T R RichmondGood Me Bad Me is a compelling page-turner. Chilling and dark, it grips you and won't let go
—— Rebecca DoneTen pages into Good Me Bad Me, I became an Ali Land fan. Her beautiful, intimate voice immediately tugged me into the heart and mind of a serial killer's daughter and then wouldn't let go. Is there hope for this teenager's new life outside of her mother's horror? Original, intense, and utterly compelling, Good Me Bad Me is not just a terrific thriller but a psychological dive into a young girl's soul. It takes subtlety and perfect balance to maintain a dark tale like this, and Land never once stutters or makes you look away
—— Julia Heaberlin, author of Sunday Times bestseller , Black-Eyed Susans2017's most hotly anticipated psychological thriller
—— StylistA creepy, compulsive thriller I read in one breathless gulp... Good Me Bad Me reveals its shocking secrets slowly while reeling in the reader with all the intricate skill of a spider spinning a web. One not to be missed
—— Red MagazineDark, claustrophobic and thought-provoking. You'll read this outstanding debut while holding your breath!
—— Prima MagazineAn incredible narrative voice . . . Very special and different
—— Radio 4's Open BookTerrifyingly good. The terror of Liz Nugent mixed with the teen angst of Louise O'Neill
—— The Irish Examiner
Frightening and enthralling
Gripping from the first page
—— Elle UKEven the twists have twists
—— i paperChirovici has written a very clever book. The plot twists and turns, backtracks and goes round in circles, so you can never be quite sure where it’s going to go next.
—— Watford ObserverThe Book of Mirrors will keep you up until you’ve finished it
—— MetroTwisty novel full of unexpected developments and untrustworthy characters
—— Sunday Times CultureChilling
—— Steph’s Book Bloga must read
—— FeminaAn intriguing whydunit underpinned by a treatise on memory, as a number of witnesses create a cat’s cradle of conflicting testimony designed to keep the reader guessing to the very end
—— Irish TimesThe Book of Mirrorsengages on a number of levels. Chirovici delights in leading the reader down various blind alleys and keeps us turning the pages
—— Times Literary Supplement