I listened to the audiobook of this. Was well done - I didn't spend the whole time laughing at the narrator.
I was a mega-fan of Andy McNab's work in high school, but I eventually got tired of the "Nick is okay, but someone he cares about dies" plot line, so I haven't read any of his stuff for years. Seven Troop is non-fiction, but the plot is much the same. Which actually helps me understand (or at least, think I understand) WHY his fiction work went the way it did.
The style of writing is very much what I remember of Andy's work - sort of detached and dry, but in an entertaining way - to me it actually felt a lot like coming home. Hearing a familiar phrase such as "good style" actually brought back some really good memories for me, and I found myself laughing on several occasions. But I cried too.
Seven Troop is basically a summary of Andy's time in the SAS and a few years afterwards. It follows the lives of the guys that he was in Seven Troop with and the ways in which they reacted to different situations - war, peace, relationships, mourning, stress, success etc. And PTSD. I'm probably projecting, but I felt like this was his attempt to muddle through why things might have happened the way they did.
Bit of swearing, as per usual, but for some reason the "souf London" accent (if that's what it was) of the narrator somehow rendered it less offensive.
Is basically chronological, so a bit of a time-travel through the Troubles, Thailand, Cambodia, Afghanistan when Osama was a good guy, Colombia, first Gulf War... Wraps it all up with a blurb about PTSD and the way in which the military handles it (or doesn't, as the case may be).
I liked it. I would probably consider listening to it again eventually.