The Guardian (Charlottetown)

George Smiley returns in ‘A Legacy of Spies’

- BY JONATHAN ELDERFIELD

“A Legacy of Spies’’ (Viking), by John Le Carre.

John Le Carre’s newest novel, “A Legacy of Spies,’’ brings back the man who is perhaps Le Carre’s most famous of spies, George Smiley, though mostly in name and recollecti­on. Smiley is missing in action from the present in the story, but his influence is powerful and pervasive in the story’s past.

The cast is filled with characters from earlier Smiley books such as “Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy’’ as readers revisit the Cold War of East Berlin in the late 1950s and early 1960s. Smiley acolyte Peter Guillam is forced into becoming our narrator as the modern British Secret Service is threatened with legal action over alleged past misdeeds. Guillam tells the tale of spies crossed and doubled crossed, of spies murdered and rescued, and of deceit within his own Circus as the spy shop was then known. He recalls his own involvemen­t in operation Windfall, and the reader is left to work out how much of Guillam’s confession is deception, intended to mislead his friendly interrogat­ors, and how much he was himself misled by his mentor, Smiley.

The plot revolves around a series of intelligen­ce sources providing informatio­n about the Stasi, the East German Intelligen­ce Service. One source escapes the Stasi net but is later betrayed and another agent is turned to the British side before also being discovered.

The British try to protect their informatio­n flow, all the while working under the uncertaint­y of a spy operating among their own ranks. How do you save your spies when you have a mole within your own service? To paraphrase the old intelligen­ce saying “Who watches the watchers?’’ the reader is left to wonder who deceives the deceivers?

Le Carre has the future of England and of Europe on his mind while telling this Cold War tale. Real sacrifices were made during the Cold War, to go along with the fictional ones of “A Legacy of Spies.’’

He forces readers to confront the past and with it our notions of past motivation­s and deeds, but at the same time has a focus on the present state of Britain and its future. Le Carre seems to be railing against Brexit in this novel. Those sacrifices weren’t made in the name of Britain alone but for all of Europe, for the West.

“If I had an unattainab­le ideal, it was of leading Europe out of her darkness towards a new age of reason. I have it still,’’ says Smiley to Guillam as he recalls his motivation­s.

“A Legacy of Spies’’ recollects Le Carre’s legacy as a master spy novelist — the book has a nostalgic feel to it — the characters’ presence is comforting, even if the lessons within are not.

With each new novel, Le Carre continues to shine a light on the dark and fascinatin­g world of spies.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? This September 2011, file photo shows British author John Le Carre at the U.K. film premiere of “Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy,” in London. After a hiatus of more than 25 years, Le Carre is again writing about one of the world’s most famous fictional spies.
AP PHOTO This September 2011, file photo shows British author John Le Carre at the U.K. film premiere of “Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy,” in London. After a hiatus of more than 25 years, Le Carre is again writing about one of the world’s most famous fictional spies.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada