TINKER TAILOR SOLDIER SPY by John Le Carre

I loved Le Carre’s most famous novel, THE SPY WHO CAME IN FROM THE COLD, and so expected to enjoy this, his second-most-famous. Instead I was just confused. It just seemed like there were a lot of names and a lot of middle-aged men talking to each other sweatily. I think this is not the author’s fault, but mine, for reading it in tiny snippets while falling asleep over a long period.

I learnt later that the book is based on the real story of how Kim Philby, one of the most important people in MI5, was eventually unmasked as a Soviet spy in 1963. I was required to dive deep into the Wikipedia, where I was most enthralled to learn that he was turned to the Soviets while at Cambridge, and spent his whole early career attempting to get into MI5, solely for the purposes of being a traitor. Once he had fled to Moscow, he said his ‘purpose in life was to defeat imperialism.’ What a baller, bizarre statement! Can you imagine being so entranced by something in university that you would stick to it single-mindedly for the rest of your life, lying to every single person you know for decades? Can you imagine spending years sending people to their deaths for a ‘concept’? I can barely commit to a haircut!

2 thoughts on “TINKER TAILOR SOLDIER SPY by John Le Carre”

  1. For me the 1979 Tinker Tailor with Alec Guinness was the masterpiece. The Burlington Files gives a fascinating insight into just how little agents in the field know about what they are doing whether in London or Port au Prince maybe as a prelude to a Haitien equivalent to the Bay of Pigs. Also, remember it’s written by an agent not a professional writer like JleC so don’t expect JleC delicate diction et al.

    If you dig into the backgrounds of Pemberton’s People in MI6 you will understand so much more and be rewarded when reading Beyond Enkription. I suggest you read the brief News Articles in TheBurlingtonFiles website dated 31 October 2022, 26 September 2021 and 7 January 2020. One critic described Beyond Enkription as ”up there with My Silent War by Kim Philby and No Other Choice by George Blake”. He wasn’t that far wrong, indeed arguably spot on.

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