Seymour orchestrates the build-up to his denouement as masterfully as Merrick co-ordinates his Spanish sting

The Sunday Times on In At The Kill

This is a Jonas Merrick novel with a satisfying protagonist, a cast finely etched and deployed well by a master writer, and a series of milieux that underline the strength of criminals. A thriller of note, it is particularly interesting for capturing the tensions between police and the security services and within the latter<i></i>

The Critic on In At The Kill

You don't read Gerald Seymour, you commit to it totally. His stories have amazing detail, yet you still fly through them. And your effort is well rewarded

Sun on In At The Kill

Se alle

As ever, the great strength of Seymour's writing lies in his depiction of the poor bloody infantry of crime and policing

The Times on In At The Kill

Seymour's portrayal of the city's crime dynasty, and its inner rivalries and tensions, is masterful

Financial Times

Seymour has produced a tingling and compulsive story

On Yorkshire Magazine

Seymour has a knack of getting inside his characters in plots that are dryly compelling rather than sequencing continuous beatings-up and murders on every other page like so many thrillers

Peter Hain

Liverpool: a suburban crime family grips a whole city with fear.

And their ambition reaches further still.

Galicia: an entire community waits on the windswept edge of Europe for the delivery of four tonnes of cocaine, brought across the ocean in an almost unbelievable craft.

London: Jonas Merrick, grey and quiet, alone in a small office, seems an unlikely character to be tasked with bringing down an international drug network.

But while Jonas's colleagues regard him as scratchy, fastidious, old, he is also ruthless, cunning and brutally pragmatic. And he has a man on the inside: a would-be money-launderer on that wild Spanish coast. A man who has been undercover for so long, he has almost forgotten who he really is.

And he is due to come home. Has to. For he will be given no mercy if he is caught.

But Jonas needs him to stay.

The superb Jonas Merrick is fast becoming one of the great figures of British spy fiction. In At The Kill may be his most compelling story yet.

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Jonas Merrick returns in another uncannily topical novel from one of the greatest thriller writers of our time.
PRAISE FOR GERALD SEYMOUR - :

He has never lost his journalist's eye for the stories behind the news - The Sunday Times on The Crocodile Hunter

Compelling novel . . . Seymour's feel for the Kent landscape and his realisation of minor characters, such as Cameron's heart-hardened mother, are almost Dickensian - The Times on The Crocodile Hunter

Ask aficionados who is Britain's finest thriller writer, and many would answer the veteran Gerald Seymour - Guardian on Beyond Recall

The three British masters of suspense, Graham Greene, Eric Ambler, and John le Carre, have been joined by a fourth - Gerald Seymour - New York Times on The Outsiders

Seymour produces the most intelligent writing in the thriller genre - Financial Times on Beyond Recall

Britain's finest thriller novelist is still the veteran Gerald Seymour, whose touch remains sure - i Paper on A Damned Serious Business
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781529340457
Publisert
2023-01-19
Utgiver
Hodder & Stoughton
Vekt
660 gr
Høyde
238 mm
Bredde
162 mm
Dybde
40 mm
Aldersnivå
00, G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
432

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Gerald Seymour exploded onto the literary scene in 1975 with the massive bestseller HARRY'S GAME. The first major thriller to tackle the modern troubles in Northern Ireland, it was described by Frederick Forsyth as 'like nothing else I have ever read' and it changed the landscape of the British thriller forever. Gerald Seymour was a reporter at ITN for fifteen years. He covered events in Vietnam, Borneo, Aden, the Munich Olympics, Israel and Northern Ireland. He has been a full-time writer since 1978.