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The Spy Game

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A novel about one family trapped in the grand narratives of history.

On a freezing January morning in 1961, eight-year-old Anna's mother disappears into the fog. A kiss that barely touches Anna's cheek, a rumble of exhaust and a blurred wave through an icy windshield, and her mother is gone. Looking back, Anna will wish that she could have paid more attention to the facts of that day. The adult world shrouds the loss in silence, tidies the issue of death away along with the things that her mother left behind. And her memories will drift and settle like the fog that covered the car.

That same morning a spy case breaks in the news--the case of the Krogers, apparently ordinary people who were not who they said they were; people who had disappeared in one place and reappeared in another with other identities, leading other lives. Obsessed by stories of the cold war and of the Second World War, which is still a fresh and painful memory for the adults around them, Anna's brother, Peter, begins to construct a theory that their mother, a refugee from eastern Germany, was a spy working undercover, and might even still be alive. As life returns to normal, Anna struggles to sort between fact and fantasy. Did her mother have a secret life? And how does anyone know who a person was once she is dead?

The Spy Game is a beautifully wrought novel about loss, history, memory, and imagination, and the way in which we shape these to construct our own identities. It is a painful and tender reminder of the importance of understanding the past and, in turn, the importance of letting go.

320 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2009

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About the author

Georgina Harding

26 books48 followers
Georgina Harding is an English author of fiction. Published works include her novels Painter of Silence (shortlisted for the Orange Prize for Fiction 2012), The Spy Game (shortlisted for The Encore Award 2011), and The Solitude of Thomas Cave.

She has also written two works of non-fiction: Tranquebar: A Season in South India and In Another Europe. She lives in London and the Stour Valley, Essex.

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5 stars
38 (9%)
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100 (25%)
3 stars
152 (39%)
2 stars
77 (19%)
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22 (5%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 71 reviews
Profile Image for Debbie Robson.
Author 13 books179 followers
June 20, 2019
This is my favourite book, so far, for 2019. Immediately I was drawn in - a young girl, just a little older than I would have been in 1961 but living in England not Australia during the Cold War. Her mother, who is German, disappears and it is not until later that both children (her brother is older) are informed that she has died. The children invent stories, speculate about what really happened to their mother. Fact and fiction blend, told mesmerisingly from the viewpoint of a child and then later of an adult trying to separate little known facts, childish speculations from the possibilities of what really happened to her mother.
“Once she is on the bridge the sound of her steps softens. There are no walls to harden them now but only open air. The river runs below, wide and cold and dark, but you cannot see it. You know it is there because of the mist that rises off it, that spills up about the skirt of her coat, that carries with it the raw waking breath of the land beyond the city.
And now the figure of another woman, slender and dark and darkly dressed, detaches itself from the group on the near side of the bridge and starts to cross in the opposite direction...
I saw it happening: my mother coming closer; the back of the other woman receding, her red scarf a last point of colour in a grey distance, going wherever it was that my mother was coming from. Most of their agents were expendable but sometimes, if one was especially valuable to them, they would do things, even sacrificing one of the others, to get that agent back.”
This is a mesmerising novel highlighting how detached adults can be from children and from each other. The children’s imaginings breathe fresh on the page just as the landscape does during holidays and several winters. Somehow Harding manages to keep the many strands of this story fixed in the reader’s mind yet slipping away too, just as childhood does.
Profile Image for Greg.
2,183 reviews17 followers
May 11, 2021
This isn't Le Carre or Ludlum. Nor is it Fleming. This is an unusual take on the spy genre.
SPY - 4 stars: We are never really sure. Is a young girl's (Anna) mother a spy? And/or her father? Perhaps it is the vicar? Her piano teacher? The piano teacher's lover seems the likely candidate. But it could be anyone.
MISSION - 3: We never know, but that doesn't matter. When Anna finds her mother's diary, she reads lines of poetry and tries to find, perhaps, a code buried. But is that code in notes of music? Or perhaps in a type of communication used daily.
ATMOSPHERE - 5: The wide-eyed innocence of Anna and her older brother Peter is disrupted by their mother's disappearance. Their world changes, they see everything differently. Anna clings desperately to various news stories (true) and fictional books and films through "The winter of the Great Blizzard." The transitions from the past to present and to the future are beautifully written.
PACE - 3: Smooth.
RESOLUTION - 3: "I shall always associate my mother with fog."
SUMMARY - 3.6: This one opened my eyes as to what mysteries this genre might hold.
Profile Image for John.
Author 537 books183 followers
April 3, 2015
In 1961 as the Cold War raged, when Anna was eight and her brother Peter a couple of years older, their mother Caroline drove off into the thick fog surrounding their remote Home Counties home and never came back again. Later the children were told that Caroline, blinded by the fog, had driven into a tree and been killed. Peter, however, putting his mother's German accent together with the fact that just at that same moment there had been some sensational spy arrests -- the Krogers, Gordon Lonsdale -- developed the conspiracy theory that Caroline was a Soviet sleeper in the UK, and persuaded Anna this must be true. Later he succeeded in persuading her, too, that her piano teacher, Sarah Cahn, a pre-War Jewish refugee from Germany, must likewise be a spy.

And so for years Anna played the spy game. Decades later, looking back on it all, she realizes the cruelty that she and Peter in their blithe ignorance inflicted on people like their father and poor Sarah Cahn, who eventually put her head in the oven (an awful irony). In the later parts of this spellbinding novel Anna sets out on a journey to try to find out just who her mother really was, and why she acted as she did. By now Peter has lost all interest in the spy game: he has a new life in New Zealand, and seems to want nothing more than to forget the past. Crucially, although Anna is finally unable to establish the truth, she discovers -- or, more accurately, imagines -- a version of the truth with which she can live.

I can imagine plenty of people being drawn by this book's title -- or even by my description above -- into thinking it's a thriller. It's not. What it is is an astonishingly well wrought portrayal of childhood and the follies to which childish misunderstandings and obsessions can give birth. Unlike other books of this kind that I've read, however -- such as L.P. Hartley's The Go-Between -- the writing has a sort of clinical dispassion that doesn't allow us to lurch into any easy sentimental forgiveness of consequences. The two characters in the book who're by far the most sympathetic are the children's somewhat diffident father and the quietly despairing piano teacher, Sarah Cahn, both of whom are in essence part of the supporting cast.

This is a novel that I suspect will haunt my mind for a very long time . . . until eventually I pick it up to venture back into its world once more. Its voice is a quiet one. The quiet voices tend to be those we remember the longest.
Profile Image for Belinda Vlasbaard.
3,370 reviews100 followers
June 19, 2022
4 sterren - Nederlandse paperback

Een ijskoude ochtend in Engeland, januari 1961. De moeder van de achtjarige Anna verdwijnt voor altijd in het niets. Een vluchtige kus, een laatste groet door de met ijs beslagen ruiten en ze is vertrokken. Later die dag hoort Anna dat haar moeder bij een ongeluk is omgekomen. De volwassenen hullen zich in stilzwijgen en het lijkt erop dat ze de herinnering aan Anna s moeder liever laten verdwijnen.

Dezelfde morgen komt er een spionagezaak aan het licht, waarbij ogenschijnlijk gewone mensen heel iemand anders blijken te zijn. Anna s broer Peter ontvouwt de theorie dat hun moeder een vluchtelinge uit Oost- Duitsland een spionne was. Hij denkt dat ze nog in leven is.

Als de anderen weer overgaan tot de orde van de dag probeert Anna erachter te komen wat de waarheid is. Leidde haar moeder een dubbelleven? Hoe kom je erachter hoe iemand werkelijk was als diegene al is overleden? Deze vragen zijn het begin van een obsessieve speurtocht.

Intens, in verhaal en helderheid. Een andere manier van een spionage roman. Totaal andere invalshoek. Vond hem echt wel goed. Het is géén Fleming of zo maar juist zo heerlijk anders. Als je dat van dit genre kunt zeggen.
Profile Image for Sara.
1,622 reviews73 followers
November 10, 2009
2.5 stars. This book was quite slow moving, and although I enjoyed parts of the story very much, it felt too vague and flimsy overall for me to fully enjoy it. The story follows a girl named Anna, whose mom supposedly dies in a car crash in 1962, when Anna is eight. On the news, there are all sorts of reports about spies, and Anna's brother begins to suspect that their mom did not die after all but instead was a spy and moved on to reinvent herself somewhere else.

I really liked the story about Anna and her brother trying to figure out pieces of their mom's past. They write down what they remember about their mom and figure out how to communicate in code if the need arises. I thought these scenes between the siblings were some of the strongest in the book - mainly because in these scenes, something happened.

In the rest of the book, not much occurred. The action jumped around from the past to the present without warning, making me all too often unsure about when the story was taking place. There were so many filmy scenes in which I think the author was trying to show how mundane life is, but these scenes didn't really relate to the main plot. Also, the beginning of the book - like, the first two chapters - were soo incredibly abstract and gave me nothing to hold on to that it took me quite some time to actually get into the story. Even then, I wasn't fully drawn in because there would be an interesting scene, followed by... nothing.

The problem for me, I think, is that the premise of the book was more interesting than the execution. The book is not a thriller, not a mystery, and not very gripping. I'm all for literary fiction, but this novel didn't feel like it was written to tell a story but to relay the lives of the members of this seemingly ordinary family. There were a few interesting threads woven into the story but these were too bogged down with unremarkable scenes to make the book very memorable.
Profile Image for Judy.
1,945 reviews37 followers
August 9, 2009
Was Hilda a spy for the Soviet Union who returned to Russia before she could be unmasked and arrested or did she simply die in an auto accident? Eight year old Anna and her older brother, Peter, are told that their mother is dead, but there is no funeral, their father (who had a secret job during World War II in England and who met their mother in Berlin after the war) took them to the sea to stay immediately after their mother's death, and when they returned to their home all traces of their mother have been removed. Unable to understand what has happened or to have any closure, Anna and Peter, especially Peter, conjecture that their mother was a Cold War spy and begin to collect evidence. Undoubtedly their suspicions were aroused because there had been a major arrest of two Soviet spies in England on the same day as Hilda's death. The arrested spies had posed as a happily married couple living in rural England and they had been broadcasting and receiving information to and from Russia from a transmitter concealed in their home. Maybe their mother was still alive and living back in East Germany or the Soviet Union. This book focuses on grief, loss, and the inaccuracy of childhood memories as Anna and Peter begin to put together recollections of their mother, snatches of conversation they overheard, the realization that their mother was raised in a German village that was now inside the boundary of the Soviet Union, and supicions of people and circumstances in their English village to convince themselves that if they figure out what really happened they will find their mother again.
Profile Image for Diana.
27 reviews1 follower
September 19, 2013
This book is slim paperback and so it did not take me too long to read but I enjoyed every minute.

I thought her ability to get inside the mind of a child was excellent and also the relationship between the sister and brother. I don't remember being confused by the time switches as some other readers were. When I was a child I lived in Vienna, just after the second WW and I very well remember the division of the city between the four powers and the fear that was very common that it if you went into the Russian sector you would never be seen again. I am sure it was the same in Berlin.

I also lived through the Cold War and vividly remember Khrushchev sending the ships with the missiles to Cuba and how as teenagers we were convinced our last hours had come.

To return to the novel, at the time it was set, it was considered best for children if they were not told anything upsetting, perhaps in certain circles more than others. Outrage was expressed by some when Jacqueline Kennedy allowed her small children to attend their father's funeral. So I think the author has evoked the era extremely well. I didn't mind that there was no resolution at the end, a more realistic ending. But read it, it's worth it.
Profile Image for David.
158 reviews29 followers
December 29, 2013
2009 was a busy year for me, yet I still bought as many books as normal - the result being that I have several unread books from that year languishing on my shelves, this being one of them, despite my having read (and highly rated) Harding's other two novels. A dull novel that I was trudging through with little interest prompted me to finally pick it off the shelf, and I'm so glad I did. As beautifully written as I have come to expect from the author, this is a wonderfully layered examination of how people are constructed and can be reconstructed (or not) from pieces of fact and memories (which of course are not always reliable), filtered through the eyes of children who do not always understand everything they see. Some lovely metaphors for all this involving fog and blanketing snow which in one instance covers the bombed out ruins of a German city making derelict houses appear like fairy tale castles.
54 reviews
January 13, 2012
I really enjoyed this book. It was just beautifully & evocatively written. The characters were well painted & very believable, it was also very moving.
It made me remember so many incidents from my own childhood & how believable fantasies can develop.
It also illustrates very well the problems caused by adults not telling children the facts. A friend of mine knew her Mother was ill when she was a child, but no one told her how ill she was & one day when she came home from school she wasn't there. There is a lot of truth in this book.
Profile Image for Bronwen Griffiths.
Author 4 books24 followers
January 13, 2023
I was given this book and almost thought not to read it. Thank goodness I did. A beautiful elegiac novel told from both the point of view of a child and adult, about her missing mother who may, or may not have been a spy. I found it a very moving novel and though not a great deal happens, there is sufficient narrative tension to make one read on. A perfect book! It is one I will not forget.
Profile Image for Tori.
767 reviews13 followers
June 9, 2009
This was such a surprising book. I was expecting kind of an espionage story with lots of action. What I got was a slow-moving, thoughtful story that provided me with a lot to think about. I like both types of books, but since I wasn't expecting that out of this book, it was a nice treat! I won this book from Goodreads, and what a great prize it was - I might not have chosen it otherwise.

The story is about a little girl and her brother, whose mother dies in a car crash. Because that takes place in the early 60's, much has been in the news about spies and double agents, etc. Peter, the brother, begins to suspect that perhaps their mother didn't really die, but was a spy. A few coincidences occur to support that possibility. Because that seed of doubt was planted (and doubt is power, as the author says), the desire to solve the "mystery" of her death continues to haunt the children into their adult years.

I thought the author painted wonderful pictures with words, and got me examining some things in my own life. The narrator of the story was the girl - I can't even think of her name - and action moves back and forth from the past to the present. Haven't we all just done "stuff" to take time, like the girl in the story who plays piano scales, builds card houses, and polishes silver in order to keep from thinking about reality?

Harding's story deals with the desire of most people to want to make sense of their past, to attach a logical reason for why things happen. Life is complicated, though, as the narrator finds out, and things aren't always what they appear. and if things aren't what they appear - it isn't necessarily bad. Sometimes it turns out to be a method of survival to reinvent yourself. And, as Harding sums it up: "This is what the whole world is doing: clearing, forgetting, reconstructing."

I thoroughly enjoyed the story - it was a fairly quick read, but carefully written. My only complaint - and perhaps this will be taken care of by the editor - is the failure to use the subjunctive. I don't know why it bothers me so much, but when a thoughtful book has "If I was" instead of "If I were", it grates on me! and there were at least 3 instances of that in the book. But - if that's the worst thing about it - so be it!
Profile Image for Betty.
547 reviews62 followers
April 13, 2009
An unusual plot line, a little disconcerting at first until you really get into it. Georgina Harding demonstrates how non-verbal family relations can create false imagery to young children. The novel centers around the mysterious disappearance of the mother of two children and how they try to cope. They are told nothing about the disappearance, simply that she has died in an accident. There is no funeral, the last sight to them was of their mother driving off on a foggy, frosty morning as she has so many times before. However, with lack of knowledge comes lack of closure for these youngsters. No one will talk to them about it. To them, she has simply disappeared.

The parents met in Germany in the aftermath of WWII. The father is English and the mother is thought to be German, or is she really Russian? The book covers past, present, and later jumps to the children as adults. In the present, the Cold War has a firm grip on reality and nobody trusts anybody yet they all keep silent. This story becomes quite fascinating, with glimpses of what life was like in the Cold War, glimpses of what life was like at the end of WWII, the hunger, the desolation, and the trauma of putting lives back together. The children demonstrate how their minds fill in the blanks when their father won’t talk about their mother, and how they interpret what the Cold War is about. This is a good read of a strange time in history. It’s even comical sometimes to see where their minds take them and what they learn in the process. Children are adaptable, but they need to know what to adapt from.

This review is based on an advance reading copy and so I am not commenting necessarily on the finished product, but I did note in this copy that although the book is in five parts, no chapters are marked and sometimes the reader finds him/herself suddenly in a different time period with no warning. This confused me at first, but I did get the hang of it. Perhaps in the finished book this won’t be a problem. If the reader is looking for a thriller or a book on fighting in a war, this is not necessarily the book for you. For imagery, imagination, and coping, for a story about people, then definitely I would recommend it. This novel is suitable for young adults and older.
Profile Image for Jane.
820 reviews785 followers
April 18, 2016
“There are different kinds of memory, conscious and unconscious. There are memories that the conscious mind goes over repeatedly, that are recalled, observed, caught like a snapshot of the time, and oneself in it, one of the figures in the picture. Memories like these become like history, fact-filed for recall, detached from emotion. But there are others that come back without conscious thought and that are experienced again, more or less vividly, like dream versions of themselves.”

On a cold morning in January 1961, eight-year-old Anna’s mother watched her mother disappear into the fog.

Later she was told that her mother would not be coming home again. She was dead, after her car apparently skidded on black ice on the road to London.

Later the same day a sensational story broke on the evening news. A Russian spy ring had been uncovered in London and several arrests had been made. Arrests of seemingly ordinary people who had lead double lives and carried extraordinary secrets.

Anna and her elder brother Peter were told little about their mother’s death, they didn’t attend her funeral and they were never taken to her grave. Was there father trying to protect them, or was it something else?

The two children thought it was something else. They linked the disappearance of their mother – a German refugee – with the spy case.

They begin their own investigation. At first Peter takes the lead, but later it is Anna.

It would be unfair to say more than that about the plot, but there is much more to be said about the book.

It grips from the first page and doesn’t let go.

The story shifts between periods and perspectives. It is sometimes a little difficult to keep track, but it serves the author well as she recreates England in the Cold War and the world that Anna sees just perfectly.

Georgina Harding writes wonderful prose and she shows great skill in creating characters who are utterly believable but also, ultimately, unknowable.

The themes are fascinating and well explored there are so many intriguing details.

It all adds up to a brilliant second novel!
Profile Image for Annette.
164 reviews
April 26, 2014
Coincidentally, I read this straight after reading Audrey MaGee's The Undertaking which deals with similar territory. The writing is very different but the emotional power is just as strong and I would highly recommend reading the two together perhaps this one second as I have done, it works chronologically with the time frames both books deal with.

This is beautifully written and multi-layered book that gently shows you the story. It's such a joy to find writing like this that is subtle but clear rather than the heavily sign posted stuff that is often published.

If you've picked this up expecting a thriller, as I half did you will be disappointed unless you're able to go with it then it repays careful reading. The ending delivers just as Audrey Magee's book does and reminds you of the thousands of people we live along side who went through the war like this, on the other side, and what happened to them when it was over for the rest of us.

Basically, it's about two children's search for their mother's identity, they think she's a spy and they do indeed find out that she had secrets.

Profile Image for Denise.
7,519 reviews137 followers
April 23, 2017
On the same winter morning in 1961 that a spy case breaks in the news, 8-year-old Anna's mother drives off in her car, never to return. There's been an accident, she's told, her mother is dead, and Anna's father whisks her and her older brother Peter away to the seaside for some time without further explanation. It's not until her brother Peter develops an obsession with the seemingly coincidental timing of the supposed accident of which the children never got any details that they start to wonder whether their mother, a German their father met and married in Berlin shortly after the war, was indeed who she claimed to be or could instead have been a spy - one that might perhaps even be still alive. Decades later, Anna goes on a journey that leads her to Berlin, Poland and on to Russia as she attempts to trace her mother's origins and determine the truth behind her life and death.

A subtle, atmospheric and intriguing novel that moves at a slow pace but draws the reader in and doesn't let go as it follows the childish investigation the children undertake after their mother's death as well as the adult Anna's journey of discovery into her mother's identity and history.
Profile Image for Erika.
754 reviews55 followers
May 29, 2009
Anna remembers her mother leaving, and people saying she died, but she and her brother Peter didn't get to attend the funeral. They both think there is something more to the story, and this book is about how they grow up and try to figure out this mystery that is their mother.

She starts the book talking about the fog that she remembers so vividly from the day her mother left. I think this is an interpretation of the whole fog of their lives concerning their mom and their background. The whole time I was reading I felt like I was waiting for some conclusion that never came. The book was more about how this not knowing shaped their lives as children, and then again as adults. The narrator goes back and forth from being a kid and talking about the things happening at the time, and being an adult and going to look for any proof of who she was, and who her mother could have been.

I really liked this book, it gives you the choice to come up with your own conclusion. And leaves you wanting more.
Profile Image for Theresa.
10 reviews
June 4, 2009
Georgina Harding's The Spy Game is story of two small children dealing with the loss of their mother. Peter beleives his mother was a spy and little Anna is unsure what to beleive. This story is set in 1962 and the present, but clearly the author wants to address issues lingering from WWII. She has done so well and directly. Like a childs perspective the facts are clear even if the true meaning is a bit more muddled. From the descriptions of the family yard to the disconnection of the siblings, I enjoyed this childs view. I was involved with this story and felt I could relate to this family. Looking foward to more from this wonderful author.
Profile Image for Tracy.
310 reviews13 followers
May 8, 2012

Wow. This was my response as I started it: Spies! Orphans! 60s Cold War Britain! What a perfect beginning ... and yet the book is even better than that.

Everything about it just sang to me, the questions of identity and roots and memory. The childhood obsession with spies and the belief that their deceased mother isn't really dead, but a spy in hiding, Peter and Anna's counterespionage attempts, and then the adult Anna slowly going about trying to find the answers. It's a slim book, it probably only took 3-4 hours to read, but it's the sort that leaves you at peace at the end, just mulling it over. It just felt perfectly balanced.
Profile Image for Kathy K.
51 reviews
January 27, 2023
What a discovery is Georgina Harding. This haunting novel kept me fully engrossed throughout. Among other strengths, Harding evokes that early era of the sixties perfectly - I was there with Anna as Britain froze in the winter of 1963. The mystery of their mother’s unexplained disappearance and true identity is even more poignant for its not being truly resolved. A strong sense of sadness and loss and a measure of longing (sehensucht perhaps) pervades the book. Loved it from beginning to end.
Profile Image for Mummalovesbooks.
122 reviews2 followers
August 9, 2019
This book is filled with intrigue and I really enjoyed it.
I love spy stories and this one is good, told through the eyes of a child.
It’s a mixture of imagination and clues that make you question the possibility the child could be right!
I liked the end it leaves the storyline conclusion open for you to make up your own mind.
Definitely one to read.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
18 reviews1 follower
July 19, 2022
I am a spy story aficionado – fiction and nonfiction. I consider this book a cross between literary fiction and suspense with cold war as the backdrop. I believe I would enjoy this book more on the second reading.

It is a story of two young children who witnessed their mother driving away in a cold January morning never to return. What happened to her? Anna and Peter, her older brother is informed that she met with an accident and is dead. Anna’s father an ex-military officer, has spent his war years in Berlin. He is now bringing up his children. Peter is studying in a boarding school. He comes home during school vacation. They live in a village in Cotswold with a hilly tract. Anna and Peter suspect that their mother’s disappearance was not ordinary. They think that their mother was a foreign spy. Obsessed with this thought, Peter becomes some sort of expert on the spy trade, gathers information and coaches Anna on whatever he learns. Every vacation on his return home, Peter becomes more alert, brooding, and aloof. Both convince themselves that their mother is not dead. This is the story of their search for their mother. Peter moves on in his life, but Anna continues the search through her adolescence and adulthood. The book covers a time span from the early sixties to the turn of the century. Anna travels to Berlin, Poland and finally to Kaliningrad. The city was formerly Konigsberg, provisionally placed under Soviet administration under the Potsdam agreement and annexed by the Soviet Union on the 9th of April 1945. My mentioning this historical fact should suffice that as an Indian citizen I only know about WWII, and the Cold War through my reading and watching movies.

It took me long to read the book. The story lingers. Enough tidbits about the main theme that keeps you hooked. It took me time to get a grip on the format. It is about Anna looking back at her growing years, interspersed with fragments of adulthood. She continues her quest to find her mother. I cannot even see it as a story told in flashback because the present pops up suddenly for a paragraph or two and Anna goes back to her childhood. The author is gifted with language. And the result! Incredibly captivating prose. She captures places, moods, seasons, people, habits, and the inner world in a way that is a pure joy to read. “For ourselves, we knew no control but only eased into freedom of a kind that the adult world did not recognise, that was the unspoken world of the motherless. No one to be answerable to, no one to make us put our boots on before we went out, no one watching.” I witnessed myself slowing down at various places, getting engulfed by Anna and Peter’s world. The impatience for the story to move on and reveal, coexisting.

I was incredulous when I reached the end. I read the last sixty pages again. My need for a concrete answer had made me read rapidly, skip, and miss vital detail. Gripped me, the book, surely! Anna, Peter, their father, Ms. Lacey, and Susan her daughter, Ms. Sara Cahn the piano teacher and Anna’s journey have come to inhabit my mind. I am eventually at peace with the way the book concluded. In fact, it could have not been any other way. I happy that I allowed myself the pleasure of reading ‘The Spy Game.’
Profile Image for Noninuna.
861 reviews34 followers
March 18, 2017
People does not change because you knew something else about them. They still looked the same. Only, if you thought of it, the way you saw them changed. There was the person you saw, who was always the same, and then there was the other person you found out they were inside. Like Russian dolls. Or spies. Like Helen Kroger and Leontina Cohen.



When you read the title of a book, don't expect more than it is. For this particular one, as per its name, it is just a game.
Out of the blue, just right her mother death, her dad took Anna & her older brother, Peter to an island for a trip. She was just 8 years old at the time. Peter was sceptical with everything that is happening. He was fascinated with the spy that he wondered if their mother was one since she's a German. It was during the Cold War & everything seems possible.
The story was told from Anna POV & it was quite slow moving. We got to see how she grew up with his brother obsession about war, espionage & everything related. However, there was an incident that led Anna asked herself whether her brother was right all along.
There are a few other characters that add spice & colours to overall story such as Susan, her friend & neighbour with her parents who were basically family to them (who apparently was from Tanah Melayu. LOL the shocked when your home country got mention in a historical fiction) & Mrs Sarah Cahn who was her piano instructor.
I read this book without checking the rating on Goodreads so that I could get through it without prejudice and it work!
I really pity Anna. She was left with confusions for a child to deal with, up till she can't differentiate what is imagination & what is real.
I learned quite a lot from reading this. It's a good experience but a few issues got the stars out of the rating.
Profile Image for Stephen Wood.
Author 6 books5 followers
February 28, 2025
A woman re-lives her childhood as she tries to discover the truth about her mother, a refugee from Eastern Germany, in the cold-war environment of espionage. Although extremely well written, and it’s worth reading for that alone, it is a very slow burn. There are no conclusions, no startling revelations, and in the end the reader is very much left to decide what might have been what, or not as the case may be. I would have liked there to have been something more to the detective side of the story, but it’s atmospheric and poignant and a recommended read.
27 reviews
April 9, 2024
Crawls along at a very slow pace. It reminded me of cider with Rosie - but that was a book about growing up. This book can't seem to make up it's whether it's a snapshot of childhood or a mystery book - in the end it's neither - it fits between timelines and I found it confusing as to which bits were imaginary and which bits were from Anna.

Peter seems almost to have a different identity when he is older - without any explanation as to why.

Not for me sorry.
422 reviews
April 17, 2018
Beautifully read by Eleanor Bron but not an amazing audio read. Perhaps listening over such an extended period and while gardening meant I lost some of the emotion. Liked the way the story unfolded through flashbacks.
Profile Image for Tanzey.
309 reviews1 follower
November 16, 2018
Not a bad tale which describes the imagined and possible life of a young refugee in post war Berlin and the links to a 1950s England family told through the eyes of the children. You are left guessing and probably never really know the answer.
Profile Image for Alice Bloomfield.
1,823 reviews10 followers
May 15, 2024
4 stars ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

This is a great look at the way children see their parents, the stories they tell to make sense of the world and how little sometimes people will say in order I keep their secrets or protect others. The setting of 1960s and spies was fascinating and a good read.
168 reviews
December 5, 2018
Another one I read some time ago, so don't remember much apart from the fact that I enjoyed it.
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