Vagabond

Vagabond

by Gerald Seymour (Author)

Synopsis

It was a dirty job in a dirty war. Danny Curnow, known in the army family by his call sign, Vagabond, ran agents, informers. Played God with their lives and their deaths, and was the best at his job - and he quit when the stress overwhelmed him. Now he lives in quiet isolation and works as a guide to tourists visiting the monuments and cemeteries of an earlier, simpler, conflict on Normandy's D-Day beaches. Until the call comes from an old boss, Bentinick. Violence in Northern Ireland is on the rise again. Weapons are needed for a new campaign. Gaby Davies of MI5, sparky and ambitious, runs the double agent Ralph Exton, who will be the supposed middle man in brokering an arms deal with a Russian contact, Timofey. The covert world of deception and betrayal was close to destroying Danny across the Irish Sea. Fifteen years later the stakes are higher, the risks greater, and there is an added agenda on the table. If he wants to survive, Danny will have to prove, to himself, that he has not softened, that he is as hard and ruthless as before. VAGABOND shows Gerald Seymour writing at the top of his powers and returning to the territory of some of his greatest bestsellers, Harry's Game, Field of Blood and The Journeyman Tailor.

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Quantity

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 432
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Hodder & Stoughton
Published: 17 Jul 2014

ISBN 10: 1444758594
ISBN 13: 9781444758597
Book Overview: Who can you trust, when betrayal is a way of life?

Media Reviews
A plot worthy of Le Carre. * Irish Times *
Without argument, Gerald Seymour produces the most intelligent writing in the thriller genre ... Danny is a classic Seymour protagonist, and the tension here is conjured with authority. * Financial Times *
Gerald Seymour produces the most intelligent writing in the thriller genre . . . VAGABOND bristles with the skill he has developed over the years. Danny is a classic Seymour protagonist, and the tension here is conjured with authority. * Financial Times *
Back on the turf that launched his successful thriller-writing career with Harry's Game, Gerald Seymour has lost none of his instincts for gripping plots, fine characterisation and a great sense of time and place. * Choice *
Seymour's multistranded narrative of dark deeds and black ops is fuelled by an exhilarating cynicism. Here the ambitiously self-serving prosper and the virtues of loyalty, friendship and patriotism are exploitable weaknesses . . . Seymour tends to be overshadowed by John le Carre as one of the great British post-cold war novelists, but VAGABOND confirms that he deserves to be seated at the top table. * Irish Times *
A tale of intrigue and subterfuge which feels like it is set to explode on a slow-burning fuse. Characters are intricately constructed and the plot unravels only when all the pieces are in place to guarantee a nail-biting climax. A story of moral ambiguity without a moment's break in the rising tension, VAGABOND will appeal to newcomers to Seymour's novels and long-time fans alike. * Weekend Bookworm *
Author Bio
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.