Books by John Le Carre
Born: 10/19/1931John Le Carre Biography & Notes
John le Carre is the pseudonym of David John Moore Cornwell (born October 19, 1931) in Poole, Dorset, England.
He was the son of Richard Thomas Archibald Cornwell(1906-75) and Olive (Gassy) Cornwell. He began his formal schooling at Sherborne School in England. From 1948-49, he studied at the University of Berne, developing a fascination in foreign languages, and then studied at Lincoln College, Oxford. He graduated from Lincoln College with a B.A. (with honours) in 1956. He then taught at Eton College for 2 years. Subsequently, he joined the British Foreign Service (ultimately MI6), where he served mostly in West Germany.
In 1954 he married Alison Ann Veronica Sharp whom he later divorced in 1971. There were three sons born of this marriage: Simon, Stephen and Timothy. In 1972 he married Valerie Jane Eustace a book editor with Hodder and Stoughton, and this marriage produced one son Nicholas.
Le Carre is the author of many Cold War thrillers, notably those recounting the exploits of George Smiley. Two novels of the Karla trilogy series, Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy and Smiley's People, were adapted as BBC television series, in which Alec Guinness starred as Smiley.
A Perfect Spy, which is regarded as an autobiographical novel, is grounded in le Carre's peculiar relationship with his father. Richard Cornwell is described by LynnDianne Beene as "an epic con man of little education, immense charm, extravagant tastes, but no social values" (John le Carre, p. 2). Beene quotes le Carre's reflection on the novel that "writing A Perfect Spy is probably what a very wise shrink would have advised" (p. 14).
Nearly all of le Carre's novels are in the spy-thriller genre, with the notable exception of The Naive and Sentimental Lover. This novel also has autobiographical elements to it, being based on his relationship with James Kennaway and Susan Kennaway. This three-way relationship followed the breakdown of le Carre's first marriage.
Kim Philby, the British double agent, blew le Carre (and many others besides) to the Russians. Le Carre's response was characteristically that of a deep thinker: he carefully depicted and analysed Philby in the guise of Bill Haydon, the opponent of Smiley in the central work of le Carre's novel Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy. As the mole, 'Gerald', Bill Haydon, le Carre makes hay with the opportunity to detail the deceit and weaknesses of Philby. A further element of psychological revenge is exacted by having one of the (fictional) agents profoundly affected by Haydon's treachery, Jim Prideaux, silently execute Haydon in the wake of Haydon's unmasking and public humiliation.
Le Carre's work is in many ways a critical and reasoned response to the lurid sensationalism of the James Bond genre of spy writing. His heroes are three-dimensional, their engagement with the world altogether more realistic, and their circumstances markedly unglamorous. He is widely hailed as writing some of the most literary and philosophically significant spy novels of the 20th century.
His works also differ from the Bond books in that they are morally relativist; there are constant reminders of the fallibility of western espionage systems and western countries in general, often with the implication that the Soviet bloc and the NATO bloc are essentially two sides of the same coin. The over-simplicity of the good-versus-SPECTRE world of Fleming has no place in le Carre's work, where the spies seem to serve espionage more than any ideology. le Carre is more interested in the uncertainty inherent in spycraft - the most unimpeachable information from the enemy might always prove to be bait or a trap, a logic that tends to render the information obtained far less useful. In short, his books leave behind an unmistakable air of skepticism.
Le Carre published an essay entitled "The United States has gone mad" in The Times in January 2003, protesting the war in Iraq, saying: "How Bush and his junta succeeded in deflecting America's anger from bin Laden to Saddam Hussein is one of the great public relations conjuring tricks of history." He has turned down a number of awards, including knighthood.
Le Carre resides in Cornwall, England.
In 2005, the film The Constant Gardener was released, based on his novel. The story is set in slums in Kibera and Loiyangalani, Kenya. The situation affected the crew to the extent that they set up the Constant Gardener Trust in order to provide basic education around these villages. Le Carre is a patron of the charity.
He was the son of Richard Thomas Archibald Cornwell(1906-75) and Olive (Gassy) Cornwell. He began his formal schooling at Sherborne School in England. From 1948-49, he studied at the University of Berne, developing a fascination in foreign languages, and then studied at Lincoln College, Oxford. He graduated from Lincoln College with a B.A. (with honours) in 1956. He then taught at Eton College for 2 years. Subsequently, he joined the British Foreign Service (ultimately MI6), where he served mostly in West Germany.
In 1954 he married Alison Ann Veronica Sharp whom he later divorced in 1971. There were three sons born of this marriage: Simon, Stephen and Timothy. In 1972 he married Valerie Jane Eustace a book editor with Hodder and Stoughton, and this marriage produced one son Nicholas.
Le Carre is the author of many Cold War thrillers, notably those recounting the exploits of George Smiley. Two novels of the Karla trilogy series, Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy and Smiley's People, were adapted as BBC television series, in which Alec Guinness starred as Smiley.
A Perfect Spy, which is regarded as an autobiographical novel, is grounded in le Carre's peculiar relationship with his father. Richard Cornwell is described by LynnDianne Beene as "an epic con man of little education, immense charm, extravagant tastes, but no social values" (John le Carre, p. 2). Beene quotes le Carre's reflection on the novel that "writing A Perfect Spy is probably what a very wise shrink would have advised" (p. 14).
Nearly all of le Carre's novels are in the spy-thriller genre, with the notable exception of The Naive and Sentimental Lover. This novel also has autobiographical elements to it, being based on his relationship with James Kennaway and Susan Kennaway. This three-way relationship followed the breakdown of le Carre's first marriage.
Kim Philby, the British double agent, blew le Carre (and many others besides) to the Russians. Le Carre's response was characteristically that of a deep thinker: he carefully depicted and analysed Philby in the guise of Bill Haydon, the opponent of Smiley in the central work of le Carre's novel Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy. As the mole, 'Gerald', Bill Haydon, le Carre makes hay with the opportunity to detail the deceit and weaknesses of Philby. A further element of psychological revenge is exacted by having one of the (fictional) agents profoundly affected by Haydon's treachery, Jim Prideaux, silently execute Haydon in the wake of Haydon's unmasking and public humiliation.
Le Carre's work is in many ways a critical and reasoned response to the lurid sensationalism of the James Bond genre of spy writing. His heroes are three-dimensional, their engagement with the world altogether more realistic, and their circumstances markedly unglamorous. He is widely hailed as writing some of the most literary and philosophically significant spy novels of the 20th century.
His works also differ from the Bond books in that they are morally relativist; there are constant reminders of the fallibility of western espionage systems and western countries in general, often with the implication that the Soviet bloc and the NATO bloc are essentially two sides of the same coin. The over-simplicity of the good-versus-SPECTRE world of Fleming has no place in le Carre's work, where the spies seem to serve espionage more than any ideology. le Carre is more interested in the uncertainty inherent in spycraft - the most unimpeachable information from the enemy might always prove to be bait or a trap, a logic that tends to render the information obtained far less useful. In short, his books leave behind an unmistakable air of skepticism.
Le Carre published an essay entitled "The United States has gone mad" in The Times in January 2003, protesting the war in Iraq, saying: "How Bush and his junta succeeded in deflecting America's anger from bin Laden to Saddam Hussein is one of the great public relations conjuring tricks of history." He has turned down a number of awards, including knighthood.
Le Carre resides in Cornwall, England.
In 2005, the film The Constant Gardener was released, based on his novel. The story is set in slums in Kibera and Loiyangalani, Kenya. The situation affected the crew to the extent that they set up the Constant Gardener Trust in order to provide basic education around these villages. Le Carre is a patron of the charity.
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Absolute Friends by John Le Carre ( 2004)
Ted Mundy, British soldier's son born 1947 in the new Republic of Pakistan and Sasha, son of an East German Lutheran pastor, first meet as students in West Berlin in the late 60s, then again in the grimy looking-glass of Cold War espionage and, most terribly, in the modern world of terror.
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El Amante Ingenuo y Sentimental/ The Naive and Sentimental Lover by John Le Carre ( 2006) |
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Amigos Absolutos/ Absolute Friends by John Le Carre ( 2004) |
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Asesinato de calidad/ A Murder of Quality by John Le Carre ( 2004) |
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The Body Hunters Testings New Drugs on the World's Poorest Patients by Sonia Shah ( 2006) |
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Call for the Dead by John Le Carre ( 2009) |
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Call for the Dead by John Le Carre ( 1985)
George Smiley feels himself to be something of a dinosaur roaming the halls of the British Secret Service. An agent of the old-school, Smiley is called back to service one last time before retiring. When a member of the Foreign Office commits suicide following a routine interview with Smiley, the case quickly spirals outwards to involve an assortment of shady characters, both foreign and national, none of whom are what they seem to be and all with several hidden agendas.
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Cazadores de cuerpos/ The Body Hunters La experimentacion farmaceutica con los pobres del mundo/ Testing New Drugs on the World's Poorest Patients by Sonia Shah ( 2009) |
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Le Chant De La Mission by John Le Carre ( 2008) |
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LA Constance Du Jardinier by John Le Carre ( 2002) |
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The Constant Gardener by John Le Carre ( 2001)
Tessa Quayle, the lovely wife of a member of the British Foreign Service based in Nairobi, is killed in a mysterious car accident near a lake in Kenya. Tessa was an activist who had recently come across sensitive documents exposing an international corporate conspiracy to exploit Kenya's poor. Tessa's husband, Justin, has been a mild-mannered official for decades, but when he decides to get to the bottom of Tessa's death, he discovers that he has an unexpected capacity to go against the grain. He'll need it, as his journey to the truth takes him through many levels of corporate and diplomatic intrigue in Kenya, Great Britain, Italy, Germany, and Canada. This novel by master of the spy thriller John Le Carre was adapted into a 2005 film starring Ralph Fiennes and Rachel Weisz.
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The Constant Gardener The Shooting Script by Jeffrey Caine ( 2006) |
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Conversations With John Le Carre by John Le Carre, Judith S. Baughman, Matthew Joseph Bruccoli ( 2004)
Master spy thriller writer John le CarrT talks about his craft, the nature of language, the literature he loves, and the ways his life influences the creation of his novels and his characters in this collection of engaging interviews with George Plimpton, Melvyn Bragg, and other luminaries. Simultaneous.
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The Fledgling Spy by John Le Carre ( 1990) |
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The Gate by Francois Bizot ( 2004)
In 1971 a young French ethnologist named Francois Bizot was taken prisoner by forces of the Khmer Rouge who kept him chained in a jungle camp for months before releasing him. Four years later Bizot became the intermediary between the now victorious Khmer Rouge and the occupants of the besieged French embassy in Phnom Penh, eventually leading a desperate convoy of foreigners to safety across the Thai border.
Out of those ordeals comes this transfixing book. At its center lies the relationship between Bizot and his principal captor, a man named Douch, who is today known as the most notorious of the Khmer Rouge’s torturers but who, for a while, was Bizot’s protector and friend. Written with the immediacy of a great novel, unsparing in its understanding of evil, The Gate manages to be at once wrenching and redemptive. |
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The Honourable Schoolboy by John Le Carre ( 1977)
Master spy George Smiley searches for the enigmatic Soviet operative named Karla.
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Jardinero Fiel by John Le Carre ( 2006) |
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El Jardinero Fiel / The Constant Gardener Amor. A cualquier precio by John Le Carre ( 2005) |
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John Le Carre Three Complete Novels Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy/the Honourable Schoolboy/Smiley's People by John Le Carre ( 1995) |
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LA Casa Rusia by John Le Carre, Adolfo Martin ( 1996)
World powers clash for dominance as a beautiful Russian woman carries out a staggering mission and a derelict English publisher becomes the unlikely recipient of the Soviet Union's top defense secret.
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LA Chica Del Tambor by John Le Carre ( 1983) |
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La Chica del Tambor/ The Girl of drum by John Le Carre ( 2003) |
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La cancion de los Misioneros/ The Mission Song by John Le Carre ( 2008) |
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La cancion de los misioneros/ Th Mission Song by John Le Carre ( 2006) |
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La casa Rusia/ The Russia House by John Le Carre ( 2004) |
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Lebanon, Lebanon by John Le Carre ( 2006) |
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The Little Drummer Girl by John Le Carre ( 2003)
Israeli intelligence agent Kurtz--aka Schulman, aka Gold, aka Raphael--assembles a private army to trap the most dangerous Palestinian terrorist, a trap that perilously involves a brilliant, young English actress.
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Llamada Para El Muerto/ Call For The dead by John Le Carre ( 2003) |
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Looking Glass War by John Le Carre ( 2002)
The unexplained death of a veteran agent is the catalyst for a fierce and deadly game of espionage in Europe.
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The Mission Song by John Le Carre ( 2008)
Working as an interpreter for British Intelligence translating intercepted phone calls, wiretaps, and voice mails, Bruno Salvador, the abandoned son of an Irish father and Congolese mother, is sent to a mysterious island to interpret a secret conference among Central African warlords, only to find himself in the middle of a dangerous conspiracy. Reprint.
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A Most Wanted Man by John Le Carre ( 2008)
Smuggled into Hamburg, Issa, a young Russian man carrying a large amount of cash and claiming to be a devout Muslim, forms an unlikely alliance with Annabel, an idealistic young German civil rights lawyer, and Tommy Brue, a sixty-year-old scion of a failing British bank, as they become victims of rival intelligence operations in the War on Terror. (Suspense)
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A Murder of Quality by John Le Carre ( 2002)
Called out of retirement, former British agent George Smiley finds himself matching wits with a twisted killer who seems to move with ease through upper-class society.
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Naive and Sentimental Lover by John Le Carre ( 1971) |
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The New Annotated Sherlock Holmes 150th Anniversary The Short Stories by Arthur Conan Doyle, Leslie S. Klinger ( 2004)
A dual-volume, illustrated boxed set edition of Doyle's fifty-six classic short stories is arranged in the order in which they appeared in late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century book editions, in a set complemented by editor biographies of Doyle, Holmes, and Watson as well as literary and cultural details about Victorian society.
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The Night Manager by John Le Carre ( 1994)
In his first new novel since The Secret Pilgrim, le Carre brilliantly creates a new era of intrigue where the rules forged in the Cold War are put to even more terrifying use. It is the world of illegal arms dealers and drug smugglers, whose unfathomable ruthlessness is matched only by their limitless hunger for unlimited wealth.
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Not One More Death by Haifa Zangana, HaroldHarold Pinter, John Le Carre, Richard Dawkins ( 2006)
Aiming to lay bare the act of blatant state terrorism that is the invasion and occupation of Iraq, this book seeks to reveal the extraordinary tapestry of lies, distortions and gross media manipulation that underpin it. It looks at how public opinion is wilfully ignored and "democracy" used as a figleaf for the furthering of colonial ambitions.
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Our Game by John Le Carre ( 1996)
Master storyteller John le Carre's spy novels, featuring the intriguing George Smiley, have sold millions of copies worldwide and were the premise of a popular British TV series starring Sir Alec Guiness. Now the bestselling author brings readers a new story about a new kind of espionage, set during the breakup of the Soviet Union.
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A Perfect Spy by John Le Carre ( 1986) |
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Quest for Karla by John Le Carre ( 1982)
This volume includes the complete texts of the three novels tracing the chilling duel of wits between the inscrutable George Smiley and the KGB's evil genius, Karla.
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The Russia House by John Le Carre ( 2004)
World powers clash for dominance as a beautiful Russian woman carries out a staggering mission and a derelict English publisher becomes the unlikely recipient of the Soviet Union's top defense secret.
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El Sastre De Panama The Tailor of Panama by John Le Carre, Carlos Milla Soler ( 1997)
Bestselling author John le Carre--creator of the highly acclaimed George Smiley novels--has once again effortlessly expanded the borders of the spy novel to bring readers an exuberant, tense, heartbreaking, and provoking entertainment straight out of the pages of tomorrow's history.
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El Sastre De Panama/the Tailor of Panama by John Le Carre, Carlos Milla Soler ( 1997)
In a novel about global politics and the fate of truth in modern times, Harry Pendel, a tailor in Panama City who can claim politicians, presidents, crooks, and conmen among his customers, becomes an unlikely spy for British intelligence.
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El Sastre de Panama/ The Tailor of Panama by John Le Carre ( 2004) |
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Season in Hell The Life of Arthur Rimbaud by John Le Carre ( 1979) |
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Secret Pilgrim by John Le Carre ( 1993) |
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Single & Single by John Le Carre ( 2003)
A 1999 New York Times Notable Book.
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Single and Single by John Le Carre ( 2009) |
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A Small Town in Germany by John Le Carre ( 2002)
An outpost of the British government, monitoring the activity in Germany's political capitol, begins to fall apart when a low-level staff member disappears, some documents vanish, and a librarian is murdered.
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Smiley's People by John Le Carre ( 1997)
On the brink of retirement, master spy George Smiley accepts one last assignment: infiltrate the Soviet Union and track down his nemesis, Karla.
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Smiley's People/Audio Cassettes by John Le Carre ( 1990) |
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Spion, Der Aus Der Kalte Kam/the Spy Who Came in from the Cold by John Le Carre ( 1994) |
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The Spy Who Came in from the Cold by John Le Carre ( 2009) |
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Spy Who Came in from the Cold by John Le Carre ( 2009) |
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The Spy Who Came in from the Cold by John Le Carre ( 2005)
Hailed as "the best spy story I have ever read" by Graham Greene, and "the best spy story ANYBODY has ever read" by The New York Times THE SPY WHO CAME IN FROM THE COLD (1962) cemented author John Le Carre's reputation as a master of the espionage novel, and elevated the genre to the same level as the best literary writing and political thinking. During The Cold War, a burned-out spy accepts a last assignment that involves him being intentionally recruited by East German intelligence. As he proceeds with his mission, he discovers that he's lost his taste for spying and now questions the rightness of rules he once obeyed without question. With its intricate twists and double-crosses, THE SPY WHO CAME IN FROM THE COLD works as a wonderful thriller--its authenticity heightened by Le Carre's work in Her Majesty's Secret Service--but it is the book's profound questioning of the moral consequences of covert operations in the name of "freedom" that has made it a classic. In 2006, Publishers Weekly named it the greatest spy novel ever written.
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The Spy Who Came in from the Cold by John Le Carre ( 1977)
Hailed as "the best spy story I have ever read" by Graham Greene, and "the best spy story ANYBODY has ever read" by The New York Times THE SPY WHO CAME IN FROM THE COLD (1962) cemented author John Le Carre's reputation as a master of the espionage novel, and elevated the genre to the same level as the best literary writing and political thinking. During The Cold War, a burned-out spy accepts a last assignment that involves him being intentionally recruited by East German intelligence. As he proceeds with his mission, he discovers that he's lost his taste for spying and now questions the rightness of rules he once obeyed without question. With its intricate twists and double-crosses, THE SPY WHO CAME IN FROM THE COLD works as a wonderful thriller--its authenticity heightened by Le Carre's work in Her Majesty's Secret Service--but it is the book's profound questioning of the moral consequences of covert operations in the name of "freedom" that has made it a classic. In 2006, Publishers Weekly named it the greatest spy novel ever written.
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The Spy in His Prime by John Le Carre ( 1991) |
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The Tailor of Panama by John Le Carre ( 2008)
Harry Pendel keeps his past a secret from everyone including his wife. He offers in its stead an alternate version, which he has carefully constructed. But everything changes when British agent Andrew Osnard barges into his shop one Friday brandishing the truth like a weapon. Osnard is willing to keep Harry's secret as long as Harry agrees to do a little intelligence gathering for him. Desperate to retain his identity, Harry accepts the assignment, but he's so eager to please that he will do anything to tell his bosses what they want to hear.
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Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy by John Le Carre ( 1997)
The quintessential Cold War thriller, John LeCarre's TINKER, TAILOR, SOLDIER, SPY introduced the term "mole"--meaning a spy who has burrowed so deeply into his cover identity that it's nearly impossible to dig him out and expose him--into common parlance. In fact, LeCarre says, British intelligence began using the term after their operatives read this novel. The book launches a new sequence in LeCarre's series about British Intelligence (aka the "Circus"), in which British spymaster George Smiley prepares to confront Karla, his opposite number in the KGB.
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El Traidor del Siglo/ The Unbearable Peace by John Le Carre ( 2004) |
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El espejo de los espias/ The Looking-Glass War by John Le Carre ( 2004) |
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Un espia perfecto/ A Perfect Spy by John Le Carre ( 2003) |
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El infiltrado/ The Night Manager by John Le Carre ( 2004) |
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Una pequena ciudad en Alemania/ A Small Town in Germany by John Le Carre ( 2003) |






































