Mick Herron Books In Order

Below is the complete list of Mick Herron books in order. For each series, the chronological reading order is the same as the order of publication.

Publication Order of Zoe Boehm Books

  1. Down Cemetery Road (2003)
    by Mick Herron
    Down Cemetery Road was published in 2003 and is listed as book #1 in the Zoe Boehm series.
  2. The Last Voice You Hear (2004)
    by Mick Herron
    Published in 2004, The Last Voice You Hear is listed as book #2 in the Zoe Boehm series.
  3. Why We Die (2006)
    by Mick Herron
    Why We Die is a 2006 release and appears as book #3 in the Zoe Boehm series.
  4. Smoke and Whispers (2009)
    by Mick Herron
    In the Zoe Boehm series, Smoke and Whispers is book #4 and was published in 2009.

Publication Order of Slough House Books

  1. Slow Horses (2010)
    by Mick Herron
    Slow Horses was published in 2010 and is listed as book #1 in the Slough House series.
  2. Dead Lions (2013)
    by Mick Herron
    Published in 2013, Dead Lions is listed as book #2 in the Slough House series.
  3. The List (2015)
    by Mick Herron
    The List is a 2015 release and appears as book #3 in the Slough House series.
  4. Real Tigers (2016)
    by Mick Herron
    In the Slough House series, Real Tigers is book #4 and was published in 2016.
  5. Spook Street (2017)
    by Mick Herron
    Spook Street was first published in 2017; within the Slough House series, it is listed as book #5.
  6. London Rules (2018)
    by Mick Herron
    London Rules was published in 2018 and is listed as book #6 in the Slough House series.
  7. The Marylebone Drop / The Drop (2018)
    by Mick Herron
    Published in 2018, The Marylebone Drop / The Drop is listed as book #7 in the Slough House series.
  8. Joe Country (2019)
    by Mick Herron
    Joe Country is a 2019 release and appears as book #8 in the Slough House series.
  9. The Catch (2020)
    by Mick Herron
    In the Slough House series, The Catch is book #9 and was published in 2020.
  10. The Last Dead Letter (2020)
    by Mick Herron
    The Last Dead Letter was first published in 2020; within the Slough House series, it is listed as book #10.
  11. Slough House (2021)
    by Mick Herron
    Slough House was published in 2021 and is listed as book #11 in the Slough House series.
  12. Bad Actors (2022)
    by Mick Herron
    Published in 2022, Bad Actors is listed as book #12 in the Slough House series.
  13. Standing by the Wall (2022)
    by Mick Herron
    Standing by the Wall is a 2022 release and appears as book #13 in the Slough House series.
  14. Clown Town (2025)
    by Mick Herron
    In the Slough House series, Clown Town is book #14 and was published in 2025.

Publication Order of Standalone Books

  1. Reconstruction (2008)
    by Mick Herron
    Reconstruction was published in 2008 and is listed as book #1 in the Standalone series.
  2. Nobody Walks (2015)
    by Mick Herron
    Published in 2015, Nobody Walks is listed as book #2 in the Standalone series.
  3. This is What Happened (2018)
    by Mick Herron
    This is What Happened is a 2018 release and appears as book #3 in the Standalone series.
  4. The Secret Hours (2023)
    by Mick Herron
    In the Standalone series, The Secret Hours is book #4 and was published in 2023.

Publication Order of Short Story Collections Books

  1. All the Livelong Day and Other Stories (2013)
    by Mick Herron
    All the Livelong Day and Other Stories was published in 2013 and is listed as book #1 in the Short Story Collections series.
  2. Dolphin Junction (2022)
    by Mick Herron
    Published in 2022, Dolphin Junction is listed as book #2 in the Short Story Collections series.

About Mick Herron

Mick Herron is a British novelist whose darkly comic espionage fiction has reshaped the modern spy thriller around failure, bureaucracy, institutional self-protection, and the people a powerful organization would rather forget. Born in Newcastle upon Tyne and educated in English at Oxford, he spent years writing alongside a day job before becoming a full-time novelist. He is best known for the Slough House series, whose disgraced MI5 officers and magnificently abrasive boss, Jackson Lamb, brought Herron international recognition after a career that began in crime fiction rather than espionage.

His first novel, Down Cemetery Road, appeared in 2003 and introduced the Oxford-based world later associated with private investigator Zoë Boehm. The four-book sequence established several qualities that remained central to Herron’s work: intricate plotting, damaged characters, sudden violence, sardonic dialogue, and suspicion of official explanations. The series also shows why his bibliography should not be reduced to Slow Horses. Herron was already developing a distinctive crime-writing voice through Oxford mysteries before Jackson Lamb and his failed spies appeared.

For much of his early career, Herron worked as a subeditor in London and wrote fiction around the demands of ordinary employment. That experience matters because workplaces in his novels are rarely neutral backgrounds. Offices generate hierarchies, resentments, petty humiliations, absurd procedures, and elaborate systems for transferring blame. When Slow Horses was published in 2010, Herron turned those observations toward British intelligence, imagining Slough House as an administrative dumping ground for MI5 officers whose careers have been wrecked by mistakes, addictions, bad luck, or political inconvenience.

Jackson Lamb became the series’ defining presence: a former field operative whose intelligence is concealed beneath offensive habits, calculated cruelty, and apparent physical neglect. Around him, Herron built an ensemble rather than a conventional gallery of glamorous agents. River Cartwright, Catherine Standish, Roddy Ho and the shifting population of “slow horses” are competent in uneven ways, often compromised by their own weaknesses, yet repeatedly drawn into threats larger than the dead-end assignments intended for them. The novels combine espionage machinery with workplace comedy, political satire, betrayal, grief, and an unusually sustained interest in professional failure.

The series’ reputation grew gradually rather than through immediate blockbuster success. Dead Lions, the second Slough House novel, won the Crime Writers’ Association Gold Dagger, while later books expanded the conflict between Lamb’s outcasts, MI5 leadership, politicians, private interests, and secrets inherited from earlier eras of intelligence work. Herron ultimately received the CWA Diamond Dagger in 2025, the organization’s highest accolade, recognizing sustained excellence and a major contribution to crime writing.

Herron has also written standalones including Reconstruction, Nobody Walks, This Is What Happened, and The Secret Hours. These books reinforce recurring concerns without simply reproducing the Slough House formula: hidden institutional histories, compromised loyalties, surveillance, isolation, and the human damage left by people who regard secrecy as a form of power. His prose is particularly recognizable for its dry wit, controlled misdirection, shifting viewpoints, and ability to move from farce to genuine loss without treating either mode as incidental.

Screen adaptations have widened his audience considerably. The Slough House novels became the Emmy- and BAFTA-winning Apple TV series Slow Horses, starring Gary Oldman as Jackson Lamb, while Down Cemetery Road was separately adapted with Emma Thompson and Ruth Wilson. Yet Herron’s bibliography remains most coherent on the page when viewed through three broad strands: the early Zoë Boehm crime novels, the expansive Slough House world, and the standalones that move around its edges. Across them, his strongest subject is not espionage itself but institutions and individuals under pressure—especially the discarded, compromised, underestimated people who prove far harder to dispose of than their superiors expect.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *