Matthew Hall is the writer of one of my favourite series, the Coroner Jenny Cooper series, but this, his latest thriller is rather a different kettle of fish. It's a thriller featuring ex-SAS Major Leo Black, who made a life changing decision to move into academia late in life, now at the age of 50 as Dr Leo Black, he is at Worcester College, Oxford University lecturing to packed audiences of highly engaged students. However, Leo has no publications or research papers behind him, and he doesn't fit into the academic circles who scarcely view him as one of them. His new career is under threat, and he is hoping a paper he is planning to present in the US will secure him tenure and guarantee his academic future. In the SAS, his closest friend on many dangerous military operations was Sergeant Ryan Finn, although the two had not connected since Leo's abrupt and surprising departure.
Finn's wife, Kathleen, gets in touch with Leo when her husband is killed in Paris acting as bodyguard to a promising Oxford scientist, Dr Sarah Bellman, who is abducted from a hotel. He agrees to go to Paris to identify his body, weighed down with guilt at not keeping up his friendship with Finn. He wants revenge and justice for his friend, returning to Oxford after an incident in Paris. His old commanding officer, Colonel Freddie Towers, re-enters his life, informing him Bellman is one of a number of cutting edge scientists that have been taken for what appears to be nefarious corporate purposes. He wants Leo to find out what happened to Finn, Leo is reluctant, but it soon becomes clear he has no choice as his reputation is being publicly trashed and with it will go all his aspirations to establish his new career. As Leo settles all too easily into his former military person, he finds himself thrilled to once again be leading a dangerous, almost impossible mission he is unlikely to survive in South America.
Hall has Leo personify and present many of the dilemmas and problems of Western military interventions in volatile hotspots such as those in Iraq and Afghanistan, and why they are almost invariably doomed to failure. This is a exciting, brutal, violent, tense and suspenseful thriller that is compulsive reading and easily garnered my attention. However, whilst I definitely enjoyed reading this, I personally have a stronger preference for his Coroner Jenny Cooper series. Fans of action thrillers with a strong military thread will likely enjoy this and appreciate the talents and gifts of the central protagonist, Leo Black. I should warn readers there is unethical animal experimentation and abuse in the book. Many thanks to Penguin Michael Joseph for an ARC.