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The Spy Who Came In from the Cold (George Smiley, #3)
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Spy Who Came in from the Cold > Cold Spy: In Progress (No Spoilers Please)

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Adelaide Blair | 1317 comments Mod
This topic is for those who wish to discuss the book in progress. No spoilers please.


Cheryl | 1171 comments I just picked this up from my library and will begin reading it tonight.


message 3: by Cheryl (last edited Jan 03, 2017 05:19PM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Cheryl | 1171 comments I just finished chapter 7. I am loving it so far. Lots of that late 50s/early 60s Cold War era atmosphere. It's been rainy and dreary here, so it fits in perfectly with reading this book.


Cheryl | 1171 comments As I'm reading this, I can imagine how hard it would be to have a life outside of being a spy. I can see why Leamas is divorced and doesn't spend time with his children.

I wonder why he got married and had kids in the first place? Maybe it happened before he was recruited into being a spy? Knowing what he knows now about spying, he couldn't possibly take a chance putting people he cares about in danger. And so we see why his relationship with Liz is so distant.


Adelaide Blair | 1317 comments Mod
Yeah, I can see that there would not be much outside one's job. Although Control is married. I think it is a matter of being able to compartmentalize, and Leamas does not seem to be able to do that.


Cheryl | 1171 comments Control has a desk job and isn't out in the field, so I think that makes a difference on how vulnerable one's family would be to being harmed by agents on the "other side." Leamas had been out in the field the entire time, so there must have been periods when he had no contact with his family due to the security of his mission. That had to have strained the marriage and relationship with the children.


Adelaide Blair | 1317 comments Mod
Yeah, although if I was a bad guy, I would target the hell out of Control's family. Maybe that goes against the spy code or something. I am really enjoying this book, btw.


message 8: by Cheryl (last edited Jan 05, 2017 02:08PM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

Cheryl | 1171 comments I had watched the miniseries of Le Carre's The Night Manager (which I loved). In it, the woman "controlling" the spy infiltrating an arms dealer operation was pregnant and married. At one point, the "bad guys" did beat up her husband when they suspected a mole in their operation. However, it only made her go after them more. She was great: a bad-ass pregnant woman kicking ass!


Sarah (sarahmott) | 466 comments Man, I really feel like I should like the Smiley books more. This one is good, but I feel like the one for me is out there somewhere. Which one is your guys' favorite?


Adelaide Blair | 1317 comments Mod
Sarah wrote: "Man, I really feel like I should like the Smiley books more. This one is good, but I feel like the one for me is out there somewhere. Which one is your guys' favorite?"

This is my first Le Carre!


Cheryl | 1171 comments My first, too.


Cheryl | 1171 comments I just finished it. Wow! After the halfway mark, I was totally engrossed in the story and could not put the book down. Five stars.


Cheryl | 1171 comments Has anyone seen either film version of Le Carre's Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy? I have not. I'd heard it had a very complex plot and was difficult to follow. That's another book that has intimidated me. However, after reading The Spy Who Came in from the Cold, I may give it a shot.


Cheryl | 1171 comments After finishing this book, I kind of think that readers who enjoy noir fiction might also like The Spy Who Came in from the Cold. There are certain things both have in common. (Being vague on purpose here, due to spoilers.)

Sarah, maybe that's why you didn't like the book as much as others did? I'm not sure if you're a big fan of noir fiction.


message 15: by Kirsten (new)

Kirsten  (kmcripn) I so need to re-read this !


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