John le Carré
David John Moore Cornwell, born 19 October 1931 in Poole, Dorset, England, is far better known as John le Carré, novelist of spys, spycraft, the Cold War, and intricate, noir-ish novels of espionage and moral ambiguity. Think of him as a modern Joseph Conrad, an updated Eric Ambler, an international Raymond Chandler. Just after WWII he cultivated a gift for languages while studying at the University of Bern in Switzerland. In 1950 he joined the Intelligence Corps of the British Army and worked as a Cold War interrogator in Austria. He later worked for the intelligence services MI5 and MI6 (with occasional overlapping jobs as a teacher in French and German) until the huge success of his third novel, The Spy Who Came in from the Cold (1963). His pseudonym (French for “John the Square”) was required since he was an active Foreign Service officer, and he kept it as his books became regular bestsellers and adapted for film and television.
John le Carré’s great creation is George Smiley, a career intelligence officer with The Circus, the Brtish overseas intelligence service. Smiley is a deliberate anti-James Bond, an unglamorous intellectual who outthinks and outmaneuvers his targets, his competitors both within the service and the country’s enemies anywhere in the world. Le Carré deep and sophisticated interest in all participants of this Cold War, those witting and unwitting, make his canvas rich and broad. His elegant style elevates his novels beyond plot to psychological dramas and moral dissections. John le Carré is not only a writer of his time, but he has become an artist of our time.
P.S. If you ever get a chance to hear Cornwell read his own work, seize it. Only two titles currently have him as a reader, Agent Running in the Field and The Pigeon Tunnel, but older (sometimes abridged) titles are out there in out-of-print-land. He is a terrific reader.
The Secret Pilgrim
The Secret Pilgrim
The acclaimed novel featuring George Smiley, from the #1 New York Times bestselling author of A Legacy of Spies and The Night Manager, now an AMC miniseries
The rules of the game, and of the world, have changed. Old enemies now yield to glasnost and perestroika. The killing shadows of the Cold War are flooded with light. The future is unfathomable.
To train new spies for this uncertain future, one must show them the past. Enter the man called Ned, the loyal and shrewd veteran of the Circus. With the inspiration of his inscrutable mentor George Smiley, Ned thrills all as he recounts forty exhilarating years of Cold War espionage across Europe and the Far East--an electrifying, clandestine tour of honorable old knights and notorious traitors, triumph and failure, passion and hate, suspicion, sudden death, and old secrets that haunt us still.