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This is the third in the George Smiley series even if he does just feature in it and does not play a big part in the story-line.
This about a small part of the intelligence services in competition with its big sister-service "the Circus". After they lose one of their borrowed transporters due to a "accident" and the film this agent should have veen carrying they want to mount an operation of their own to show that they are still capable and that the big boys and girls are really overrated.
They a ...more
This about a small part of the intelligence services in competition with its big sister-service "the Circus". After they lose one of their borrowed transporters due to a "accident" and the film this agent should have veen carrying they want to mount an operation of their own to show that they are still capable and that the big boys and girls are really overrated.
They a ...more

If John Le Carre had wished to write romance novels for his career; he would have written the best of his era. If he had wished to write swashbucklers, he would have written the best of his era. If he had wished to write adventure tales, etc etc etc. My point is: he is that kind of writer. Happily, he started his career in public service--intelligence--and Fortuitously for the world's readers, he pursued a career writing an ensuing legacy of espionage novels. And those are the best of his era.
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The Looking Glass War was published shortly after perhaps Le Carre's most famous work The Spy Who Came In from the Cold and is every bit as murky, grim and depressing as the aforementioned (possibly even more so).
The book starts brilliantly in a Finish airport where a British agent (Taylor) anticaptes the arrival of a pilot who, having undertaken a risky flyover, should have some vital information in his possession. From the moment the uneasily dialogue with the aiport barman begins you know th ...more
The book starts brilliantly in a Finish airport where a British agent (Taylor) anticaptes the arrival of a pilot who, having undertaken a risky flyover, should have some vital information in his possession. From the moment the uneasily dialogue with the aiport barman begins you know th ...more

John Le Carré's fourth novel, published in 1965, two years after his famous, ground-breaking "The Spy Who Came in From the Cold," reflects the spirit of the times. The work was released two years after the assassination of U.S. President John F. Kennedy, an event which may or may not have played any significant role in the mind of the writer. The Cold War was now in full swing, the Cuban Missile Crisis was long past, and the moral magistrates in the East and the West passively issued their summa
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Jan 02, 2012
Gerald
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