Mark Colvin had one of the most beautiful voices on Australian radio, as a news journalist, foreign correspondent and current affairs program presenter for the ABC, Australia’s national broadcaster.
His English father, ostensibly a diplomat but actually an MI6 spy, was often posted out of England, and Colvin’s earliest memories are of Vienna and Berlin.
At age 9 he was sent to boarding school in England, where vicious beatings were administered by a sadistic deputy head, replaced by the head after Mark’s mother complained about the scars and scabs on his legs. The head, Colvin thought, took a salacious pleasure in the beating. Nasty stuff, and every time I read of one of these English boarding schools for boys I am horrified anew.
Colvin’s mother was Australian, and he chose to live and work here as a journalist with many foreign postings of his own, until he caught an infection in Africa that hospitalized him for 6 months, affected his health for the rest of his life and curtailed his travels.
He joined the ABC in his 20s, starting out with regional radio, learning how to manage on a shoe string budget, and eventually became one of our most respected and loved radio presences.
He saw himself as an observer, intensely interested in exploring and trying to understand multiple points of view. He remarks that some people attacked as a right winger, others as a rabid leftie. He was quite happy with this, as it seemed to indicate that he was treading a steady path.
His commitment to balance is conveyed through his measured prose. Even when he’s describing being under fire in Iraq or other war zones, his tone is one of calm.
It’s not an action story, despite expectations possibly set up by the subtitle - Memoirs of a Spy’s Son. His father was in many ways unknown to Mark, often away, and always in a world where discretion and secrecy prevailed. In writing this book, Mark was able to find materials released from security classification that helped him to learn more about his father and to fill out some of the shadows of his father’s life.
Fascinating stories, both.