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Spy novels1/16/2024 ![]() If you haven’t read them before and like the Bourne films with Matt Damon, or even the new Daniel Craig-type James Bond films, they’re really that kind of thing – nail-biting, white-knuckle rides. The main character, Quiller, is a sort of James Bond character, but he’s also a complete mess: he’s completely neurotic and paranoid. Meanwhile it was going for more like 1,000€ on eBay. I finally found one in a bookshop in Antwerp, for 3€, and I very calmly went up to the counter and bought it. The 19th one came out after he died, and it had a very short print run, and I spent ages and ages looking for it. I think it’s criminally forgotten, this series. But then under the pseudonym Adam Hall he wrote 19 of these novels. It’s part of a series of books by a guy called Elleston Trevor, who wrote The Flight of the Phoenix, which was made into a famous film. This is much more of an action adventure thriller. But it’s about a guy who is an English teacher at a small English school in Cairo, which is based on an English boarding school, and he gets dragged reluctantly into this spy ring. At the centre of it is a classic mole hunt, which was very common in all of those British spy thrillers of the day, with a kind of Philby-esque character in it. It’s about Suez, and it’s also about the Israel-Egypt stuff that went on 1967. It alternates between two different times. It’s also about the run-up to the Suez crisis? But also the depiction of Egypt is fantastically atmospheric it’s a brilliant book. I quite like bleak novels about espionage and this one is very much of the old school: very cynical, hard-hitting spies betraying each other the entire time. It’s just brilliant characterisation but also an incredibly bleak picture. It’s set in 1967 mainly, in Egypt, and it’s to do with double agents, and also triple agents. I discovered this book by pure chance in a second-hand bookshop in Brussels years ago and I have read all of the novels Hone has written – I think there are five. “Hone has a lot more suspense than le Carré, quite a lot more melodrama, a lot more twists and turns in the action. It’s like reading Graham Greene or Eric Ambler – but yet it has quite a modern, twisty-turny feel to it as well. The difference is that it has a lot more suspense than le Carré, quite a lot more melodrama, a lot more twists and turns in the action. Hone is pretty much completely forgotten now, but I think he rates with le Carré, and he’s quite similar to le Carré in prose style. On to your next choice, The Private Sector by Joseph Hone. When they rerun the series apparently the crime rate drops in Moscow because everyone is inside watching it. It’s one of these classic TV series they made in the 70s that had a very famous theme tune, and they did it all in black and white. I don’t know when they last ran it, but they just made a prequel. But it’s also just a very exciting thriller.Īnd it’s still a popular TV series in Russia? It’s very interesting to read and to see a spy story from the other side of the Iron Curtain. It’s bigger than James Bond, it’s like James Bond, Robin Hood and King Arthur: he’s a complete mythical figure in Russia. A lot of people in Russia today are convinced that this agent, Maksim Isaev, was a real guy. It’s so convincing that a lot of people in the Soviet Union thought it was a true story. It’s a fictionalised version of some real events that happened, where the Americans were thinking of making a separate peace deal with the Germans that would exclude the Soviets, and this guy’s job is to stop that happening. It’s extremely tense, very tautly plotted and very convincing. It’s a slightly weird thing – you’re supporting him, you’re following him, but he’s actually loyal to the Soviet Union. He’s managed to infiltrate himself as a medium-grade Nazi and it’s set in the last two weeks of World War II. The premise is a little bit strange, if you’re reading it now, because the hero is a Soviet agent dressed in a Nazi uniform. It’s quite a fascinating novel from a propaganda point of view, which is basically what it amounts to. It was part of the Soviet government’s effort in the Cold War to rehabilitate the idea of the secret agent and to get recruitment. I’m not sure it was as specific as that, but it did turn out that way. ![]() Your first choice is Seventeen Moments of Spring, which was a Soviet attempt to create a rival to James Bond. Foreign Policy & International Relations.
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