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Execution

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
When a Russian hit team catches up with Roman Tobinskiy, political opponent of Moscow and former FSB colleague of Alexander Litvinenko (murdered by polonium poisoning in 2006), it's an easy kill; he's lying helpless in a hospital bed. They realise too late that in an adjacent room is Clare Jardine, ex-MI6 officer, recovering from wounds while saving Harry Tate's life. 

When Clare goes on the run, Harry is ordered to track her down before the Russians reach her. It's one of his toughest challenges yet. For not only is Clare as adept at covering her tracks as Harry is himself, but the Russians are not the only ones chasing her. 

Harry is about to come up against an old enemy from his past. And if he is to save Clare's life – as she saved his – he must seek help from a most unlikely source.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 22, 2013
      Magson’s exciting fifth Harry Tate thriller pits the former MI5 operative against a pair of Russian assassins gunning for his friend Clare Jardine, an ex-MI6 agent who was shot while saving Harry in 2012’s Retribution. After an attempt on her life while she was recovering from her gunshot wounds in a London hospital, Clare goes underground. The extremely competent former agent is angry at just about everyone, except her girlfriend, Katya Balenkova, an officer in the Russian Federal Protective Service. Complicating Harry’s efforts to find Clare and protect her from the Russians is traitor George Henry Paulton, once an operations director for MI5 and now on that agency’s and MI6’s “seek and detain” lists. Focused on action and tradecraft, this straightforward entry bypasses the usual cross, double-cross, and triple-cross of most spy fiction as it builds to a highly satisfying conclusion in respect to turncoat Paulton. Agent: David Headley, DHH Literary (U.K.).

    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 25, 2011
      British author Magson stumbles in his second thriller featuring former MI5 agent Harry Tate (after Red Station). A routine assignment to locate Abuzeid Matuq, a Libyan banker who disappeared with a lot of money, leads Tate and Rik Ferris, his partner in tracing missing people, into a series of murders and betrayals, which turn out to be linked to a terrorist act in the prologueâa bombing that takes out a well-guarded target in Baghdad. Time after time, the author brings the reader up short with illogical or unconvincing dialogue or actions. While Tate believes that Matuq is being sought by "the more vengeful elements of the Libyan secret police," when Matuq is fatally shot after surfacing in Norfolk a few pages later, the Libyan's murder strikes Tate as "pointless" and "random," though he knows it isn't. Those aware that YouTube isn't a print Web site will find a character's assertion to the contrary another reason to disengage.

    • Kirkus

      June 1, 2011

      Spies spying on spies.

      Harry Tate, last seen escaping a Georgian death plot hatched by MI5 agents supposedly on his side (Red Station, 2010, etc.), returns to Blimey and takes up work as an independent contractor tracking the missing. Jennings, a tight-lipped lawyer who may have secret-service connections, pays him to find an Israeli professor, Samuel Silverman, gone to ground. That task hits several roadblocks, including the assassinations of Matqu, a Libyan, and Param, an embezzler and duped philanderer. Even worse, Tate and his pal Ferris, an electronics whiz, pick up two tails, Dog and Carlisle, neither of whom wishes them well. An ill-hidden clue leads to a woman who knows Silverman, knows his real identity and nationality, and indeed was placed in his entourage in Baghdad as a mole for security purposes—a plan that failed when he apparently died in a bombing of his compound. So the chase is on. Cars cut in and out. Buildings are watched and entered. Bullets whiz by. Collateral damage mounts. But by the time Tate realizes Jennings has set in motion unlimited double crosses, the puppet-master has disappeared and there's one more major gun battle and plot twist to be overcome.

      Convoluted derring-do best enjoyed by the conspiracy crowd.

      (COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

    • Booklist

      Starred review from May 1, 2011
      Following enthusiastic reviews for Red Station (2010), the first in the Harry Tate espionage series, Magson keeps the quality high with this outstanding follow-up. Retired from MI5 after a deadly betrayal by his boss, Harry, and his pal Rik, also a former MI5 employee, have gone freelance and now find people for anyone willing to pay for their services. When Harry and Rik are hired to track down a Libyan banker whos fled to England with millions of his employers money, they figure itll be an easy case. But once they locate the banker, things start to get complicated, and the bounty hunters find themselves involved in a frantic race to save an Iraqi man targeted by a trio of assassins intent on finishing their lethal mission. In a double-dealing game where its nearly impossible to separate the good guys from the bad, Harry and Rik have to use every skill from their MI5 days to unravel the tangled story. With high-octane action, steadily building tension, and a plot packed with twists, Magsons second Harry Tate novel suggests the best of Ken Follett or Robert Ludlum but with a touch more substance.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2011, American Library Association.)

    • Kirkus

      June 1, 2011

      Spies spying on spies.

      Harry Tate, last seen escaping a Georgian death plot hatched by MI5 agents supposedly on his side (Red Station, 2010, etc.), returns to Blimey and takes up work as an independent contractor tracking the missing. Jennings, a tight-lipped lawyer who may have secret-service connections, pays him to find an Israeli professor, Samuel Silverman, gone to ground. That task hits several roadblocks, including the assassinations of Matqu, a Libyan, and Param, an embezzler and duped philanderer. Even worse, Tate and his pal Ferris, an electronics whiz, pick up two tails, Dog and Carlisle, neither of whom wishes them well. An ill-hidden clue leads to a woman who knows Silverman, knows his real identity and nationality, and indeed was placed in his entourage in Baghdad as a mole for security purposes--a plan that failed when he apparently died in a bombing of his compound. So the chase is on. Cars cut in and out. Buildings are watched and entered. Bullets whiz by. Collateral damage mounts. But by the time Tate realizes Jennings has set in motion unlimited double crosses, the puppet-master has disappeared and there's one more major gun battle and plot twist to be overcome.

      Convoluted derring-do best enjoyed by the conspiracy crowd.

      (COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

    • Booklist

      Starred review from July 1, 2013
      Although Harry Tate and Rik Ferris are persona non grata with MI5, that doesn't keep their old boss, Richard Ballatyne, from using the duo for certain highly sensitive operations that he doesn't want on the British espionage agency's books. And Ballatyne's latest assignment is supersensitive: he wants Tate and Ferris to find former MI6 spy Clare Jardine, who was shot in the stomach saving Tate's life in an earlier operation and was recovering in a top-secret trauma unit in a London hospital. However, after overhearing two Russian thugs murder the patient across the hall, Clare panics and flees the hospital. Can Tate and Ferris find her before the Russians do? A chase ensues full of white-knuckle suspense and plenty of violence. Top-notch for all fans of the spy-action genre and another outstanding effort from an underrated but highly talented author. Fans of Joseph Finder and David Ignatius should start reading Magson right now; he will also appeal to the pure-adrenaline crowd who love Lee Child and Gregg Hurwitz.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2013, American Library Association.)

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