
At CrimeReads Lawson tagged some favorite books that share the "theme of Untouchable—that corrupt politicians, abetted by their underlings, escape conventional justice." One entry on the list:
The topic of corrupt politicians and corrupt bureaucrats isn’t limited to U.S. fiction. In Mick Herron’s Slow Horses series, Herron’s protagonist, burnt-out spy Jackson Lamb, is being constantly undermined by his boss, Diane Taverner,Read about the other titles on the list.who’s the head of his own intelligence service. And to make matters worse, Taverner’s bosses—the British prime minister or the minister’s lackies—also have their own self-serving agendas and they’re often at odds with both Taverner and Lamb. So Lamb is usually fighting two battles simultaneously: one against the actual bad guys and one against the guys who are supposed to be the good guys—his bosses. The Slow Horses books make me think of what’s happening in the FBI today, where FBI agents not only have to fight crime but survive in an environment where the people they work for care more about loyalty to those in power than loyalty to the law.
Slow Horses is among Bernard Cornwell's six best books.
--Marshal Zeringue