London Station by David McCloskey

6 October 2026 · 7.30pm
The MCT at Alleyn's School, Townley Road, London, SE22 8SU

Artemis Procter returns in London Station, the latest spy thriller the former CIA analyst, David McCloskey. What if the CIA and British intelligence began spying on each other? This is the question at the heart of David McCloskey’s thrilling fifth novel. A new US Administration has taken office, installing a brash and unconventional CIA Director determined to disrupt the Agency ...

Standard ticket: £15

Book & ticket: £32, (book rrp £20)

Concession ticket (under 18): £12

Book Tickets

Artemis Procter returns in London Station, the latest spy thriller the former CIA analyst, David McCloskey.

What if the CIA and British intelligence began spying on each other? This is the question at the heart of David McCloskey’s thrilling fifth novel. A new US Administration has taken office, installing a brash and unconventional CIA Director determined to disrupt the Agency and sceptical of its close relationship with their cousins across the Atlantic. Case officers, including newly installed London Chief of Station, Artemis Procter, must now navigate a tense environment as old friends become adversaries and no one knows who to trust.

When agents run by both services begin dying, Procter and her team at London Station must decide whether loyalty to the Mission and their friends means disobeying the Agency they serve…

David McCloskey’s brilliant new thriller depicts the nuts-and-bolts mechanics of how CIA and MI6 collaborate and explores what happens when politics threaten to destroy the ʻSpecial Relationship’ between America and Britain.

“The top spy thrillerist of these wild turbulent times’ Simon Sebag Montefiore

David McCloskey is a former CIA analyst who worked in field stations across the Middle East and briefed senior White House officials and Arab royalty. His first novel, Damascus Station, was called ʻone of the best spy thrillers in years’ by The Times; his second, Moscow X, was a Sunday Times Thriller of the Year. His third, The Seventh Floor, was a Sunday Times bestseller.

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