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The Tunnel Rats

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Stephen Leather is one of the UK's most successful thriller writers. Before becoming a novelist he was a journalist for more than ten years on newspapers such as The Times, the Daily Mail and the South China Morning Post in Hong Kong. Before that, he was employed as a biochemist for ICI, shoveled limestone in a quarry, worked as a baker, a petrol pump attendant, a barman, and worked for the Inland Revenue. He began writing full time in 1992. His bestsellers have been translated into more than ten languages. He has also written for television shows such as London's Burning, The Knock and the BBC's Murder in Mind series and two of his books, The Stretch and The Bombmaker, were filmed for TV.

516 pages, Kindle Edition

First published November 1, 2004

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266 people want to read

About the author

Stephen Leather

236 books1,521 followers
Stephen Leather was a journalist for more than ten years on newspapers such as The Times, the Daily Mail and the South China Morning Post in Hong Kong. His bestsellers have been translated into more than ten languages. He has also written for television shows such as London's Burning, The Knock and the BBC's Murder in Mind series. For much of 2011 his self-published eBooks - including The Bestseller, The Basement, Once Bitten and Dreamer's Cat - dominated the UK eBook bestseller lists and sold more than half a million copies. The Basement topped the Kindle charts in the UK and the US, and in total he has sold more than two million eBooks. His bestselling book The Chinaman was filmed as The Foreigner, starring Jackie Chan and Pierce Brosnan and grossing more than $100 million.

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5 stars
342 (43%)
4 stars
285 (36%)
3 stars
118 (15%)
2 stars
29 (3%)
1 star
9 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 34 reviews
Profile Image for Erin.
20 reviews
November 29, 2011
Stephen Leather is up there with one of my favourite authors, if not THE favourite. As much as I love his Dan Shepherd novels, there's something about his earlier work with his stories based in Asia that really excite me, and this one was no different. A great read!
Profile Image for Nick.
112 reviews
June 3, 2012
Pretty poor example of Stephen Leather's writing. The main protagonist, Nick Wright, is pretty dull and boring and the storyline is not great
7 reviews
Read
May 2, 2011
a story that you will keep you wanting to keep turning the pages, set in Vietnam. a good read.
112 reviews
February 11, 2024
In a generous mood, I like the Stephen Leather/Spider Shepherd books, of which I have read several. I am not sure what made me buy this, probably a Facebook post. But I read it. The reason for generosity is that it starts pretty slow, the main character has no business being by himself on a murder investigation, let alone investigating a murder overseas, and then the ending was, so what happens to the new vice president? Probably should be 3.4 to 3.6 or so rating.

Nick Wright, his partner is Reid, they are always drinking on job. They are transportation police, investigating a murder. Someone else gets killed in Thailand in a similar fashion to the murder in London, and Wright talks his way into getting sent to see the connection. All of this could have been condensed, but was not great. Then Wright gets to Vietnam and goes searching for the murderer, while tailing others involved in the case through tunnels and that was pretty good reading.
Profile Image for Jo.
46 reviews1 follower
January 3, 2021
The tunnel rats. Stephen Leather.

I came to Stephen Leather books in the last couple of years. He is a thoughtful writer.

I am enjoying his earlier work like the Tunnel Rats. A very different setting with a gripping villain. And then the surprise villain/hero character that ties all the sub plots together

One of the challenges of most Leather stories is there are a LOT of characters which means you as the reader are required to concentrate more.
12 reviews
February 8, 2018
It's Leather but it's different

Interesting change of a scenery for Stephen Leather. After having previously only read his urban jungle thrillers, I wasn't sure what to expect of this one. A pleasant surprise, fast paced, enough plot twists to keep everyone happy, and a satisfying finale. A good read indeed.
22 reviews
November 7, 2024
Gripping throughout!

A well thought out and historically researched tale with vivid description s and exciting plot and subplots. The action is suspenseful and realistic and e
ding not obvious. A thoroughly good read....more!
24 reviews
February 1, 2025
Excellent book. Despite 500 pages and tiny font it was an easy read and gripping throughout. Fantastic description all the way through and a brilliant idea for a book - really like the premise. A few small flaws if I was being picky but there often are slight holes in a story
Profile Image for Dylan Botha.
9 reviews
August 29, 2017
I really enjoyed the book. Well written, good plot and gripping. A good read.
Profile Image for K jam  Jam.
3 reviews
September 25, 2020
A well constructed and fast-moving plot the tension is continuous as the tale reaches its conclusion
Profile Image for Christoph.
6 reviews
October 3, 2023
excellent story arc

Loved the historic link to the tunnels and Vietnam Asia connections. Well written all around. Wonder if there is a sequel?
1 review
June 15, 2025
The story and characters were amazing, but the ending felt abrupt and left things hanging.
Profile Image for The Cats’ Mother.
2,340 reviews187 followers
January 1, 2016
One of his earlier standalone thrillers featuring English transport policeman Nick Wright (and his alcoholic partner Tommy Reid, yes really) investigating the gruesome murder of an American in an abandoned railway tunnel in London. A second murder in Bangkok links the deaths to a group of Vietnam veterans who worked as Tunnel Rats, one of whom is about to become Vice-President of the USA and cannot have their secret revealed, so he sends a mercenary to take care of any revelations. The first third of the book was fairly classic British Police Procedural, with a psychologically scarred hero, dysfunctional colleagues, a bit of forensics and lots of drinking and bitching, but then Nick travels to Thailand & Vietnam and it becomes more of an adventure thriller with a game of cat & mouse in the Vietnam Cong tunnels.
It was exciting and not completely predictable and reasonably fast-paced.
The one discordant note for me was the way the British paedophile sex tourist was portrayed as a harmless holidaymaker casually paying happy young boys for sex, really just as a plot device to get the information on the 2nd murder to the British team. Maybe the author wanted to portray some more of the seamy underside of Thailand but it came across to me as too normal, that it doesn't bother him at all. I guess I like the baddies in books to get their just desserts.
Profile Image for Dan.
355 reviews12 followers
January 26, 2014
I like a good stand-alone book, and this was worthy of a 3 1/2 rating, voting 4 to give the benefit of the doubt. I enjoyed the story and liked Stephen's knowledge or research in order to make the music scenes very detailed.

The problems lie in the charcterisation, mainly with the main investigating officer. Not only was he too naive and inexperienced to have been sent on an international investigation, without back up or reporting his whereabouts, but also in the fact that, maybe due to the narrator - although I do particularly like Paul Thornley - he seemed 'flat' as a main character with whom you don't really relate to or root for.

I don't think the motivation to return to the tunnels was really believable, not was the connection between the killer and the victims but all in all, it was a pleasant story with a few twists, worth reading but not ground-breaking.

Ps. Is there a sequel or can we assume the VP will live his time in office looking over his shoulder before the inevitable hit?
Profile Image for Sarah.
24 reviews
January 4, 2013
This was the first book I read on my new Kindle, and it was probably because it was a cheap, or free book. The storyline initially was good, and the premise was promising, but... (you knew one was coming, right?) it was just annoying how the main character just didn't seem to act like a police officer should. I simply couldn't buy in to the storyline as a consequence. That said, I did find the descriptive parts of the book good, I could imagine in my mind's eye the various surroundings, so that was at least a saving grace of the book. I also guessed whodunnit fairly early on too, but I think that was just luck on my part perhaps? A reasonable read, and fine if you've not read a lot of murder/mystery books.
Profile Image for Jim McGowan.
88 reviews6 followers
September 23, 2010
This is the first book I've read by this author, and it was an OK read. The story was interesting and the plot had a few twists that kept it engaging. However, I found the characters to be a little flat; and I never really had much empathy for the main protagonist. Worth a read if you are into crimey thrillers, but don't believe the marketing: it is not as good as McNab!
Profile Image for Mike.
Author 9 books15 followers
April 20, 2011
There are two problem with this. One is that the the reason for the "rats" to return to the scene of the crime is far too weak to stand up. It wouldn't even have been considered. The other is Wright's "problem" which is badly developed and unbelievable as it stands.
This is not Leather's best work. An editor should have taken him to task.
Profile Image for Sam.
3,433 reviews262 followers
May 7, 2009
I thoroughly enjoyed this book, it has well developed and believable characters and the some good unpredictable plot twists. The descriptions of the Viet Cong tunnels was very well done and puts you right there in the midst of the action. A very good read
793 reviews2 followers
June 1, 2022
Was interested in the subject matter having read many books on the Vietnam War and visited the tunnels mentioned. However I found the plot a little far fetched even for this genre... The introduction of the British Transport Police element seemed contrived. Enjoyable enough but fairly forgettable.
Profile Image for Janey Rosen.
Author 13 books102 followers
May 13, 2013
Another excellent read. Once I start Mr Leather's books I simply cannot put them down.
Profile Image for Pankaj Verma.
101 reviews1 follower
December 7, 2014
interesting and pacy but boring in parts
main protagonist is always reflecting on his divorce.
though the concept of and achieving revenge is interesting
Profile Image for Dianne.
30 reviews
June 1, 2016
Stephen Leather books are hard to put down!! Great read
Displaying 1 - 30 of 34 reviews

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