The Stranger: The Times Thriller of the Year 2020 (Jude Lyon Book 1)
M**D
Well that escalated quickly
This story is set in a shadowy, horrific and perverse world that will likely leave you feeling uneasy because it’s the exact same world we live in. The implausibly plausible plot that Conway weaves feels unnervingly realistic depicting perfectly the illusion of control.It makes you wonder what other terror lurks around the corner. Perhaps, more worryingly, does it make you understand what motivates anyone to tread these paths? The characters are all too real.It is how Conway navigates this landscape of unknown unknowns and plies his characters with impossible choices, that makes you sit up and think. How can we keep up? How can we possibly ever know what schemes are being hatched that can rip worlds apart?A ride that starts slowly but soon builds to an exponential crescendo; you’ve let go of the handlebars and there’s nothing you can do about it.
D**E
utterly compelling espionage novel
A high pace thriller with plausible characters and a just believable übervillain. There are vivid images of the war torn Middle East, and the lot is threaded with geopolitical research, and one would guess first hand experience. Highly recommended.
D**N
Very Enjoyable Series
Very believable premise
P**Y
Up to the moment thriller
Exiting and very topical thriller. Don’t usually like books with different viewpoints but this was done really well. Will definitely look for the next
S**K
Conway’s Finest Yet: a Real Triumph
Conway’s long-awaited, latest novel is brilliant and his fans will celebrate his return. It’s completely gripping from the get-go and quickly has the reader hooked.Set initially in the chaos of Syria, it captures all the hypocrisies and shaming compromises that flowed from Britain’s disastrous involvement in the second Iraq war, the homegrown terrorism it stoked, taking this to terrible, breathtaking extreme. Compromise and institutional failure are the overarching themes in an incredibly exciting and horribly believable, epic drama.Conway has become impressive in the light, but subtle ways, in which he creates and drives forward complex stories; his real skill being how the reader is effortlessly turbo-jetted through.Conway is not without humour and, towards the end of the novel’s ‘part one’ (it’s in two parts in the same volume), there’s a scene in a trendy east London restaurant that’s just so well done: absolutely en pointe & hilarious.Cleverly, but accessibly, plotted The Stranger nearly captures all-too-believable portraits of British politics, media obsessions and the almost hapless, and compromised, security services. Conway’s finest novel yet: a real triumph.
N**K
Not bad
A good story but it didn't completely grab me. I was expecting a bit more.
O**Y
The Real Thing.
Every new spy thriller novelist has to undergo the gold standard Le Carre test. Conway is most unlike Le Carre. His characters tend not to come from Pall Mall clubs, and have not been ruined by public school floggings or the incessant and pointless greasy pole contests inside our major intelligence agencies. He knows perfectly well that neither MI5 or MI6 go around bumping people off but that these unpleasant matters are invariably outsourced to specialists. His protagonists are carefully drawn and teasingly, take scores of pages to do a character striptease. His locations are as fresh as the latest terrorist attack by cleanskins in an urban side street, and his action drives the reader relentlessly from page to page. Together with Mick Herron, Conway is our hand-holder through this extraordinary world which he knows so well, hopefully for the next post Le Carre, generation.
M**X
Top read this year. Buy it!
I’ve had this on order since last September but now feel like I’ve opened all my Christmas presents too quickly - but I’m holiday so I’m going to read it again. And probably once more.This is just a fantastic read, a classic. Every bit as good as I’d hoped. If you want that rare blend of realism and excitement, this is it. Most of the tripe that I read these days is Walter-Mitty fantasy; whereas The Stranger is scarily close to today’s geopolitical reality.I won’t spoil the plot but it has all that you want in a great novel - it grabs you from the start and pulls you along to the fantastic ending.I’m a self-confessed spy-book junkie but only buy the ‘greats’ (Ambler, Le Carré, Deighton, Seymour, Fleming etc). Conway has made that list.
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
3 weeks ago