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Slough House is a series of spy novels by the British author Mick Herron.Herron began writing the first volume, Slow Horses, in 2008, and published it in 2010. The series follows River Cartwright and his colleagues, a group of humiliated MI5 agents, who have been relegated to paper pushing jobs.
Slough House is an administrative purgatory for MI5 service rejects who have seriously failed a task but not badly enough to get sacked. Those consigned there are known as "slow horses", a play on the name of the place itself, Slough House, and an expression for people who are slow at thinking and action.
Jackson Lamb, an aging Cold War-era spy who manages the operations of Slough House. Diana Taverner, serves as second desk and Head of Operations at MI5. Sidonie “Sid” Baker, the most capable of the agents at Slough House, her reasons for being sent there are unknown. Jed Moody, a Slough House agent who was previously a globe trotting spy.
Sloughhouse or Slough House may refer to: Sloughhouse AVA, a wine region in California; Sloughhouse, California, an unincorporated community in Sacramento County; Slough House (novel series), a series of spy thriller novels by Mick Herron Slough House, a fictional office location in Slow Horses, a British TV spy thriller based on the series by ...
Location of the fictional Slough House (Aldersgate Street, London) In 2003, Herron published his first novel, Down Cemetery Road. It was the first volume in a four-book series about Zoë Boehm, an Oxford private detective. [6] In 2010, he began the Slough House spy series with the first volume Slow Horses.
The grand opening of the Bible Book House on 1870 Lana. Ave. NE in 1964. Google Maps data shows that sometime between 2012 and 2016, the Lana Avenue location closed down.
While a number of biblical place names like Jerusalem, Athens, Damascus, Alexandria, Babylon and Rome have been used for centuries, some have changed over the years. Many place names in the Land of Israel, Holy Land and Palestine are Arabised forms of ancient Hebrew and Canaanite place-names used during biblical times [1] [2] [3] or later Aramaic or Greek formations.
"I think one of the biggest misconceptions about Bible camp is that you spend the entire week basically in a church service," says Grace Maynard, 24-year old former Bible camp attendee from ...