'The best debut spy adventure I've read in a long time. The two main characters - a British investigator with a private intelligence agency and the key manipulator of a corrupt Russian oligarch's finances - are vigorously portrayed, with satisfying twists and intrigues' The Times
'Chris Morgan Jones's debut arrives with a weight of expectations on its shoulders. But it's clear right from the chilling, detached opening that these are going to be met . . . Like the icy eastern winter that seeps through the pages of his novel, Morgan Jones's prose is clean and cold, crisp and ominous . . . this is a world Morgan Jones knows, and it shows. In its intelligence, its crispness, its refusal to recognise anything other than shades of grey, there are undoubtedly resonances of Le Carre here. But An Agent of Deceit is too good to need the publishing shorthand for "classy thriller": this is a debut that definitely stands on its own merits' Observer
'So-called "new Le Carres" are 10 a penny, but Morgan Jones has a better claim to the title than most, having worked for 11 years at the world's largest business intelligence agency. On one level this intelligent, sophisticated spy thriller is about money laundering. But it's also about the willed innocence that makes such activities possible - the difference between not knowing and choosing not to know . . . dapper prose and stately pacing . . . Genuinely scary' Guardian
'A well-paced, plausible thriller that brings a wealth of experience of corrupt modern business and flits between the City of London, the Cayman Islands, Moscow and Berlin faster than a liquidity crisis' The Times
'Morgan Jones weaves an engaging narrative that, through Lock particularly, confronts the dilemma of the west's engagement with dubious characters and companies - and not just those from the former Soviet Union. It is an issue with which many institutions have been grappling lately in places such as Libya . . . An Agent of Deceit is a worthy entry to the long line of spy yarns, and a reminder of how little we still know of wealth and power in Russia, for all the public visibility of the 21st-century oligarchs' Financial Times
'Brimful of insider knowledge, this debut novel heads into the world of corrupt Russian business dealings . . . an elegant, tense thriller' Grazia
'Elegant, deep and powerful. An Agent of Deceit is a thinking man's thriller that reminded me of John Le Carre's classic spy novels - but set in a chilling contemporary world in which spies have gone private and corporations are more powerful than governments. A remarkably assured debut' Joe Finder, author of Buried Secrets and Paranoia
'Accomplished and believable' Sunday Times