The Spy Who Came in from the Cold

, #3

First American Edition, 256 pages

English language

Published 1964 by Coward-McCann.

OCLC Number:
367847
ASIN:
B0BYRVKYBD
Goodreads:
157352057

View on OpenLibrary

(3 reviews)

This brilliant novel adds John le Carré's name to the microscopically small list of really great writers of espionage fiction. In truth, it does a great deal more. It is the spy novel to end all spy novels. It dispatches the spun-sugar secret agents of recent fame back to their comic-opera Graustarks forever. Its central figure, Leamas, whose mission is to trap the top spy of East Berlin, is a creation of astonishing reality and authenticity. The plot he sets in motion, and later becomes the principal victim of, is a thing of magnificent complexity. Also of far-reaching implications. For the tension within Leamas is strikingly contemporary. It is the tension of a committed man unable to come to terms with the utterly ruthless machine he serves. Only in Arthur Koestler's Darkness at Noon and Graham Greene's "burnt-out cases" can any comparison be found.

The Spy Who Came in from …

19 editions

Review of 'The Spy Who Came In from the Cold' on 'Goodreads'

At times borders on cynicism, but then you have to remember the cynicism of the whole Berlin Wall.

A bit dry and dragging in the middle once Alec begins the 50 pages or so of interviews by Fielder. But man… wow… that ending. The last 30 or so pages really made me go “oh this is why this is so highly regarded”. The conversation in the car between Liz and Alec that, to put it poorly, is about the two sides of the same coin of capitalism and communism is one for the ages. I worried it’d be a little dumb but he never gives in to simple answers and considers how complex people and ideologies in practice are. The disgustingness of working with a Nazi for the greater good doesn’t sit right with anyone, particularly you, the reader.

What a book.

avatar for mahnamahna

rated it

avatar for kwm@bookwyrm.social

rated it

Subjects

  • Cold War

Lists