Thursday, July 15, 2021

'Call for the Dead, A Murder of Quality, The Spy Who Came in From the Cold' by John Le Carre

 Call for the Dead, A Murder of Quality, The Spy Who Came in From the Cold, John Le Carre (4.0)

Three of Le Carre’s first novels introducing his reluctant hero, George Smiley, are included in this book. The third is the most famous, was made into a movie and pushed Le Carre into the world stage. The first two read more similarly to traditional ‘whodonnits’: murder, obvious suspects, handful of confusing clues and interesting results. George Smiley is introduced as an unlikely detective. He is a mousey, unkempt, bookish man, recently retired from Britain’s Secret Service. He tends to partner with a local policeman and uses his understanding of society and individuals to solve the murders. I enjoyed the first two books as pure murder mysteries, but the third is definitely something unique: a slow, intellectual, spy thriller with little action and lots of plot. The majority of the book is spent setting up an elaborate sting of a supposed East German spy. Until the end the reader is trying to understand who is really stinging whom. The movie with Richard Burton is also quite amazing.  In this book Smiley is a side character, but others from the earlier two books reappear. My only complaint about the books is the obvious anti-Semitism, particularly in the first book. It was written in 1961 with parts occurring both before and after WWII. He may have purposefully written the slights, but it was jarring to come from non-Nazi characters.


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