Good spy novels- or thriller series

Good spy novels- or thriller series

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SydneyBridge

Original Poster:

8,609 posts

158 months

Thursday 10th December 2015
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Just finished the Stella Rimmington 'Liz Carlyle' series which was excellent.
Now reading the latest Reacher and then have the latest M J Alridge.

Have also read most of Charles Cummings books
Loved Stephen Leather 'spider shepherd', all of the series- not really spy but sort of- about terrorists anyway... Read all the other Stephen Leather books as well

I started John Le Carre Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, with the aim of reading all his books, but it was so heavy going I could not get into it.

I like to read a series of books, to get into the characters, also like to read books set in the UK

Can anyone recommend any good spy/thriller novels and/or series of books, preferably set in the UK

thanks


wombleh

1,790 posts

122 months

Thursday 10th December 2015
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Just finished Agent Zigzag which was quite interesting, true story of a WW2 double agent put together from MI5 records.

Didn't realise Stella Rimmington had written novels, must have a look at those.

SydneyBridge

Original Poster:

8,609 posts

158 months

Thursday 10th December 2015
quotequote all
wombleh said:
Didn't realise Stella Rimmington had written novels, must have a look at those.
neither did I until recently, I really enjoyed them.

Vocal Minority

8,582 posts

152 months

Thursday 10th December 2015
quotequote all
wombleh said:
Just finished Agent Zigzag which was quite interesting, true story of a WW2 double agent put together from MI5 records.
I clicked on this thread specifically to recommend this book - despite it being non-fiction, Ben McIntyre writes it with the pace of a thriller - and what this chap got up to is just crackers! Crammed rather more into 5 years than expect I will in my life!

RizzoTheRat

25,165 posts

192 months

Friday 11th December 2015
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Robert Ludlum's Bourne Trilogy is well worth a read, and completely different from the films. Don't be tempted to read any of the other Bourne books that have since been written by other authors though. Ludlums other stuff is good too but the rest are standalone rather than series.

Joey Ramone

2,150 posts

125 months

Friday 11th December 2015
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SydneyBridge said:
I started John Le Carre Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, with the aim of reading all his books, but it was so heavy going I could not get into it.

I like to read a series of books, to get into the characters, also like to read books set in the UK
Shame about Le Carre. You're denying yourself some of the finest espionage novels ever written. They are always difficult to get into over the first 30 or so pages, but after that they really draw you in. Try his 'The Spy that came in from the cold'. His first book, and very readable. Great plot as well.

If you like series of books, you can do no worse that the Arkady Renko series by Martin Cruz-Smith. Start with 'Gorky Park', and follow up with 'Polar Star' and 'Red Square'. Renko is a Russian detective. Phenomenal character, basically a younger Russian George Smiley. There's a whole series of about 10-15 Renko books, but those are the ones to start with.

Like you, my brother didn't like le Carre, but he loved the Renko novels.


downthepub

1,373 posts

206 months

Friday 11th December 2015
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Len Deighton is probably worth a look. I personally didn't get on with the Ipcress File and the earlier stuff, but loved the Bernard Samson series. The triad of three novels starts with Berlin Game; all very 80s and 90s Cold War spy stuff. I'm itching to re-read them.

Huff

3,155 posts

191 months

Wednesday 16th December 2015
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Henry Porter's books are well-written and a good read.

+1 to Gorky park'; it's a great novel; I've enjoyed many others by Martin Cruz-smith, but none hit the spot quite like the first.

Smithers Jones

104 posts

186 months

Tuesday 22nd December 2015
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Currently reading the Matthew Dunn series, pretty entertaining so far...

http://www.matthewdunnbooks.com/





footnote

924 posts

106 months

Monday 28th December 2015
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The Nick Belsey series by Oliver Harris

London Detective - very now/modern - only two so far The Hollow Man and Deep Shelter great fast reads

http://www.amazon.co.uk/The-Hollow-Man-Nick-Belsey...

T1547

1,098 posts

134 months

Thursday 31st December 2015
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Most Frederick Forsyth novels, but particularly The Day of the Jackal, The Odessa File and The Fourth Protocol (personally in that order).

Brilliantly written thrillers.

TwigtheWonderkid

43,370 posts

150 months

Thursday 7th January 2016
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Try giving Alan Furst a go.

W99KSY

355 posts

138 months

Thursday 7th January 2016
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I second the Frederick Forsyth novels. Another author i've enjoyed is Nelson DeMille, especially the first few John Corey books

944fan

4,962 posts

185 months

Thursday 7th January 2016
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Joey Ramone said:
Shame about Le Carre. You're denying yourself some of the finest espionage novels ever written. They are always difficult to get into over the first 30 or so pages, but after that they really draw you in. Try his 'The Spy that came in from the cold'. His first book, and very readable. Great plot as well.
I agree. TTSS is one of my favorite books. If you struggle to get into that though you will hate the next in the Carla trilogy, The Honorable Schoolboy. Very slow.

Although The Spy Who Came in from the cold is not his first book, more his first proper spy book. His first two A Murder of Quality and Call for Dead are more detective thrillers and Smiley is more of a policeman. Spy who came in from the cold is a very good book though.

OP - They are a bit "lightweight" but have you read the Flemming novels? OHMSS is a good read as is From Russia with Love.

TorqueDirty

1,500 posts

219 months

Tuesday 16th February 2016
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SydneyBridge said:
I started John Le Carre Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, with the aim of reading all his books, but it was so heavy going I could not get into it.
Huge Le Carre fan here. Might I suggest Little Drummer Girl? Not set in the UK (much) but it is markedly different from the Carla Trilogy and I loved it.

As others have said, once you have got in to one of his books they are spell-binding.

Oh and if you do decide to read all of his books I suggest you miss out The Naïve and Sentimental Lover. It is not a spy novel and is very dated now.