Skip to content
CityAM
Main navigation
  • News
    • News
      • Latest Business News
      • Economics
      • Politics
      • Tech
      • Banking
      • FTSE 100 Live
      • Retail
      • Insurance
      • Legal
      • Property
      • Transport
      • Markets
    • From our partners
      • AON
      • Bayes Business School
      • Canada BIDs
      • Central London Alliance CIC
      • Destination City
      • Halkin
      • Olympia
      • Inside Saudi
      • Tottenham Hotspur Stadium
      • Santander X
      • YEAR SIX Dividend
    • Featured

      The next person to shop your store may not be a person at all

      AI shopping agents are rewriting the rules of online retail across North America

      Submit a story

      Tell us your story.

      Submit
  • Opinion
  • Sport
    • Latest Sports News
      • Sport
      • Sport Business
    • From our partners
      • The Morning Briefing: SBS x CityAM
      • Aramco Team Series
      • LIV Golf
    • Featured

      Cohere's Aidan Gomez bets the house on 'sovereign AI' with Aleph Alpha merger valuing the group at $20bn

      Cohere CEO Aidan Gomez on stage discussing the Toronto AI lab's strategy

      Submit a story

      Tell us your story.

      Submit
  • Life&Style
    • Life&Style
      • Life&Style
      • Toast the City Awards
      • The Magazine
      • Travel
      • Culture
      • Motoring
      • Wellness
      • The RED BULLETiN
      • Do it with Shared Ownership
      • Media Speak Hub
    • Featured

      Moonvalley's Naeem Talukdar is selling Hollywood the one thing rival AI video tools cannot: legal cover

      Moonvalley's Marey AI video model produces Hollywood-grade footage trained on licensed data

      Submit a story

      Tell us your story.

      Submit
  • Investec
  • Events
  • Latest Paper
Wednesday 24 June 2009 8:00 pm  |  Updated:  Friday 31 May 2019 10:24 am

Bullets, bombs and books on the front line

By: admindrupal

Add as a preferred source on Google

THE JUNIOR OFFICERS’ READING CLUB: KILLING TIME AND FIGHTING WARS
By Patrick Hennessey
PENGUIN, £16.99
PATRICK HENNESSEY is a 27-year-old trainee barrister, who happens to have spent the past five years as an officer in the Grenadier Guards, fighting his way through the horrors of Iraq and Afghanistan and – as the title of his book suggests – reading a few novels along the way. Having become the youngest captain in the British army, he returned to civvy street and knocked out this interesting memoir.

With his public school, Oxford and Sandhurst background, Hennessey is as traditional a British army stereotype as a booming cockney sergeant major. His insights on army life are rarely surprising, or even especially shocking, inasmuch as there’s probably little that could shock us now about the horrors of modern warfare. But it’s a highly detailed and involving look inside the modern military experience, from the bizarre otherworld of Sandhurst to the desert killing fields.

You get the sense Hennessey doesn’t think much of Sandhurst’s methods, where Hollywood war films are the predominant training tool (the famous opening scene of Gladiator demonstrates an exemplary use of fire support, in the shape of catapults). Out in the field of war, Hennessy and his fellow young officers founded the reading club of the title as a way of stifling the boredom that accounts for much of the soldiering life. The bouts of action in between are described with dispassionate vividness, and are situations you wouldn’t wish on your worst enemy – even when your worst enemy is Terrence, or “Terry Taliban” as the army apparently calls its Afghan foes.

This is an exhaustively detailed account of modern warfare, and though the amount of military jargon, acronyms and weapons description may turn off those who aren’t the most ardent military nuts, there’s much else in it to keep the attention.

Timothy Barber

CITY OF THIEVES
By Cyrus Moore
SPHERE, £12.99
CYRUS MOORE is the writing name of Cyrus Mewawalla, who was rated the number one telecoms analyst in the UK by Bloomberg in 2006, so if anybody should know the City, it’s him. He has put his experience to good use in this pot-boiling thriller about machinations and the possibility of honour in an environment where nobody else has any.

His knowledge is evident as he tells us the story of Niccolo (as in Machiavelli, presumably), a journalist who takes a job as an analyst. The tale is written with evident enthusiasm and lots of place, but there is too little distance – the details will baffle all but City insiders – and too little irony: I was unsure if character names like Dudley Rabinowitz were meant to be humorous. I fear they are intended as seriously as a company called Kloomberg.

The author is also manfully unafraid of cliche: one page gives us a man who “carried the weight of the world on his shoulders,” a building where “every room tells a story” and a trading floor that is “alive and kicking”. Later, a woman has “more curves than the Monte Carlo rally”. What is she? A snake? A doodle? Maybe she should get together with the man later who “looked like a train-wreck”.

Characters say such clunking things as: “We’re going to see some action, people” and: “My lawyer believes that I have a strong case for constructive dismissal”. Maybe I’m being unfair. If you want to get some sand between the pages of a plot-driven sub-Grisham thriller this summer, then this will do the job.

Jeremy Hazlehurst

NOBODY MOVE
By Denis Johnson
PICADOR, £12.99
JOHNSON’S previous novel Tree of Smoke was an epic, 600-plus pager about American involvement in Vietnam that hit all the buttons that signal Serious Literature, so it is something of surprise – and a relief – to see him follow it up with a slim little comedy in the style of a wittier Cormac McCarthy. Other influences are evident in the swaggering prose, namely the likes of Elmore Leonard and Raymond Chandler, which will be just fine by many readers.

For all the noir-ish influences, we are in the bright sunlight of modern California here, following a gambler called Jimmy Luntz who has a run-in with a debtor who wants his money, but soon gets involved in a far bigger scam. The adventures come thick and fast, as do the wisecracking baddies and sexy, dangerous, kooky women.

This is a novel that fits snugly inside a genre and makes no claims to world-changing profundity (it was serialised in Playboy last year) but it is none the worse for that. If you want a quirky protagonist – Luntz sings in a barbershop quartet – smartypants dialogue and flashy descriptions, then this will do the job efficiently, and afford you plenty of smirks and sniggers along the way.

JH

Share this article

  • Facebook
  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • WhatsApp
  • Email

Similarly tagged content:

Categories

  • Life&Style

Related Topics

  • NULL

Trending Articles

  • As it happened: FTSE 100 relief rally runs out of steam as BP and Shell weigh; Oil hits three-month low

  • London Tech Week sums up everything wrong with UK tech

  • Rolls-Royce shares surge as SMR unit bags multi-billion pound Swedish nuclear contract

  • KPMG’s Summer Friday half-day rollback signals deeper woes for Big Four giants

  • Inflation expectations at record high in interest rates signal

More from CityAM

  • War Horse gallops triumphantly back to the National Theatre

    Life&Style
    Majestic war horse standing in a battlefield setting, highlighting its strength and historical significance in warfare.
  • ZayZoon, the Calgary fintech born on a fishing boat, posts 1,487% growth as earned wage access goes mainstream

    ZayZoon co-founder Tate Hackert built the Calgary fintech around earned wage access
  • Echodyne and Moog Successfully Demonstrate Reconfigurable Integrated-weapon Platform (RIwP®) at U.S. Army Exercise

    Business Wire
  • Gulf trade deal: Britain should learn from the success of Dubai

    Opinion
    Dubai skyline featuring iconic skyscrapers and modern architecture under a clear blue sky, showcasing the citys urban land...
  • Botpress raises $25m as Quebec's Sylvain Perron pitches his startup as the 'infrastructure layer' for AI agents

    Botpress product UI: the Quebec startup pitches itself as the infrastructure layer for enterprise AI agents
  • On This Day: Happy birthday Andrew Neil

    Opinion
    Andrew Neil delivering a speech at a business summit, wearing a suit and tie, with a presentation screen in the background
  • Raging cricket ticket row as England fans to take over Newlands, South Africa

    Sport Business
    GettyImages 1198109917 showcases a pivotal moment in a major news event, capturing key figures in a dynamic and engaging s...
  • FluidAI wins US FDA clearance for its surgical monitor as Waterloo's Youssef Helwa targets 100,000 operations

    FluidAI's Origin surgical monitor wins FDA clearance for use in US hospitals
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • News
  • Markets & Economics
  • Politics
  • Opinion
  • Life&Style
  • Personal Finance

Follow us for breaking news and latest updates

  • Facebook
  • X
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
Copyright 2026 CityAM Limited