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Honour #1

Spy's Honour

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“When I was younger,” the Brigadier mused, “it seemed to me that we had the best Secret Service in the world. It never got mentioned in the newspapers […] Only later did I realise that this was because we had no Secret Service at all.”

The year is 1912, and as political animosity rises and wars in South Africa and Greece rage, the dominoes of Europe feel ready to topple. The British Secret Service is beginning to form, and Captain Ranklin, a former Major, is lured into the world of reconnaissance after a demotion. Averse to the concept of espionage, Ranklin reluctantly joins the new Secret Service Bureau; exclusive, elite, but bound to secrecy and subterfuge.

Paired with the rugged and morally dubious Conall O’Gilroy, Ranklin soon finds himself in over his head. A routine mission to apprehend a gold smuggler turns sour and the two are set on the trail of a notorious Irish anarchist. In pursuit, they uncover a plot that threatens to shatter the precarious state of peace in Europe, taking them to Germany, via France, and finally to Hungary in the summer of 1914.



‘A splendidly entertaining mix of early Ambler with a dash of Bulldog Drummond escapism, and are clearly the work of a writer enjoying himself.’ – The Guardian

Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 1993

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About the author

Gavin Lyall

69 books31 followers
Gavin was born and educated in Birmingham. For two years he served as a RAF pilot before going up to Cambridge, where he edited Varsity, the university newspaper. After working for Picture Post, the Sunday Graphic and the BBC, he began his first novel, The Wrong Side of the Sky, published in 1961. After four years as Air Correspondent to the Sunday Times, he resigned to write books full time. He was married to the well-known journalist Katherine Whitehorn and they lived in London with their children.

Lyall won the British Crime Writers' Association's Silver Dagger award in both 1964 and 1965. In 1966-67 he was Chairman of the British Crime Writers Association. He was not a prolific author, attributing his slow pace to obsession with technical accuracy. According to a British newspaper, “he spent many nights in his kitchen at Primrose Hill, north London, experimenting to see if one could, in fact, cast bullets from lead melted in a saucepan, or whether the muzzle flash of a revolver fired across a saucer of petrol really would ignite a fire”.

He eventually published the results of his research in a series of pamphlets for the Crime Writers' Association in the 1970s. Lyall signed a contract in 1964 by the investments group Booker similar to one they had signed with Ian Fleming. In return for a lump payment of £25,000 and an annual salary, they and Lyall subsequently split his royalties, 51-49.

Up to the publication in 1975 of Judas Country, Lyall's work falls into two groups. The aviation thrillers (The Wrong Side Of The Sky, The Most Dangerous Game, Shooting Script, and Judas Country), and what might be called "Euro-thrillers" revolving around international crime in Europe (Midnight Plus One, Venus With Pistol, and Blame The Dead).

All these books were written in the first person, with a sardonic style reminiscent of the "hard-boiled private-eye" genre. Despite the commercial success of his work, Lyall began to feel that he was falling into a predictable pattern, and abandoned both his earlier genres, and the first-person narrative, for his “Harry Maxim" series of espionage thrillers beginning with The Secret Servant published in 1980. This book, originally developed for a proposed BBC TV Series, featured Major Harry Maxim, an SAS officer assigned as a security adviser to 10 Downing Street, and was followed by three sequels with the same central cast of characters.

In the 1990s Lyall changed literary direction once again, and wrote four semi-historical thrillers about the fledgling British secret service in the years leading up to World War I.

Gavin Lyall died of cancer in 2003.

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5 stars
102 (33%)
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104 (34%)
3 stars
71 (23%)
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19 (6%)
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8 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews
Profile Image for Sid Nuncius.
1,127 reviews127 followers
March 6, 2018
This is the start of Gavin Lyall's Ranklin series which sees Ranklin at the very birth of the British Secret Service in 1912 as the First World War looms. It's well written and the political background is very well researched and painted, but I found it rather unsatisfying overall.

The book is a series of slightly disjointed episodes in Ranklin's career as it begins and he becomes a more experienced agent. There is a bit of a Bulldog Drummond feel to it – no doubt deliberate – which doesn't quite work for me. Although Ranklin is a far more thoughtful character than the gung-ho literary heroes of the time, there isn't a lot of subtlety (or plausibility at times) about the plots, so it had a slightly cartoonish feel to me much of the time.

Spy's Honour is readable enough because Lyall was a good writer and I'm glad to have had the opportunity to try it, but I won't be bothering with any more in the series.

(My thanks to Ipso Books for an ARC via NetGalley.)
Profile Image for Judi Moore.
Author 5 books25 followers
December 29, 2016
This book is set just before WWI. After spying was called 'The Great Game' (and largely took place near Russia) and before it became a recognised career path for 007. Those involved have stumbled into it, often under a cloud or directly from prison. Nevertheless, as with thieves so with spies - there is honour among them. They do their best to protect and serve without getting themselves shot or jailed in the process.

I understand much better now what the origins of the Great War really were because of this book. And my sincere thanks to Gavin Lyall for that. It's all about those pesky Balkans, and their allegiances, and their enemies, and the way everybody changes chairs each time the music stops.

Lyall's preferred subject matter lost relevance (as for Carre) when the Cold War ended. All credit to him for casting about for a new theme and preparing these three late books in such an entertaining and informative way. Sadly there won't be any more as Lyall died in 2003.
Profile Image for Book Time with Elvis.
84 reviews16 followers
May 5, 2019
Jolly good fun

I enjoyed this book immensely, entertaining and funny with some intriguing plots set against real historical background. The main characters are fun and likeable while the villains are comic bookish but I like that in this type of novel in a more modern version of Buchan's Hannay stories. If you like them then this is highly recommended.
Profile Image for Pers.
1,717 reviews
April 5, 2018
Oh dear. This author so wanted to be Erskine Childers and write another 'Riddle of the Sands', but Lyall was far from being a Childers.

This book's narrative is too slow-paced for a story that purports to be a thriller, and too long by about 1/3. To make matters worse, the characters were flat - Corinna, the American who gets dragged into the spying by Ranklin, is the only character who seems vaguely believable to me - and barely that. Ranklin himself is a noble but impoverished gentleman soldier who gets coerced into spying for the pre-War precursor of MI6 with barely any training or backup, and O'Gilroy is a caricature of the stereotypical Angry Irishman with little more colour than Ranklin.

I fell asleep reading this more than once - which shows just how bored I was.

I received an e-ARC of this book from Net Galley in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Vanessa.
622 reviews9 followers
April 30, 2018
An interesting beginning quickly devolves into a stuffy, incomprehensible mess - an especially long chapter in a French chateau is particularly rough (I spent a lot of time pursing my lips and sighing) . The premise is strong, however, and a generous reader could forgive a lot of the missteps as it is clear the author did the research. The writing seems very true to period as well, which is a pro or a con depending on your fondness for pre-WWI fiction. Something is just off with this like a shirt that's been buttoned incorrectly - it'll cover you but it'll look weird while doing so.

I received an ecopy from the publishers and NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.
9 reviews
October 14, 2025
Great Find


Perhaps not as tense as other Lyalls, more overt humour though still tongue in cheek, but rattling good yarns. I'll try another for sure if only to see how the Irishman gets on
5 reviews
September 24, 2023
A “Jolly Good” read - when spies were “gentlemen”!

Entertaining and fun to read. A great antidote to the gormless gore of the modern sour genre. Next one now.
27 reviews
June 17, 2024
Disjointed read very poor book will not be following up the series
4 reviews
October 3, 2025
A diamo d hidden in plain sight

This is splendid stuff: far more convincing than poor old Childers' Riddle of the Sands. Why has it languished out of sight all thos time?
Profile Image for Lesley.
Author 16 books34 followers
gave-up
July 24, 2011
I liked the idea - Edwardian Secret Service, no job for a gentleman so they have to inveigle reluctant agents - and it's nicely done for period and so forth without being plonkingly 'look at my research', but so far it's episodic and a bit slow, so I'm putting it on hiatus. Might be a good plane read.
Profile Image for Divad.
69 reviews7 followers
September 16, 2019
Lyall's use of written English is as good as any author I have read
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews

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