The Asian Age

Smiley is back in Le Carre’s new novel

- FLORENCE BIEDERMANN

The famous spy duo of author John le Carre and his protagonis­t George Smiley were back for new adventures on Thursday with a novel harking back to the Cold War but carrying a deeply anti-Brexit message.

The release of the 85year-old writer’s A Legacy of Spies on Thursday sees the return after 27 years of a very elderly Smiley, the star of a Le Carre trilogy who bears some resemblanc­e to the author himself.

Le Carre, whose real name is David Cornwell, worked for British intelligen­ce between 1950 and 1964 before literary stardom struck.

He turned to writing full time after the success of The Spy Who Came in from the Cold in 1963, which included the character of Smiley.

While the author and his fictional spy have aged in the subsequent years, Le Carre reignites the thrill of Cold War espionage in his latest tale, adding a contempora­ry streak.

“It was terribly hard to write this book during the period of Brexit and the ascendancy of (US President Donald) Trump and I’d like to think that Smiley was aware of a sense of aimlessnes­s which has entered into all our minds,” Le Carre told BBC radio.

“Smiley, who has spent his life defending the flag one way or another, feels alienated from it. He feels a stranger in his own country,” he said.

A Legacy of Spies traces a 1960s operation which pitted the British secret service against the German Stasi security service, ending with the death of an agent and a woman he tried to take to the West.

Now decades later, Smiley’s former assistant Peter Guillam has come out of retirement to provide an account of the

Continued from Page 1 operation alongside the spy himself.

Those accustomed to sex symbol James Bond, complete with his snazzy gadgets, will find a strikingly different spy in the “tubby, bespectacl­ed, permanentl­y worried” Smiley. “I suppose what Smiley and I have in common is that we find it difficult to remember happiness. It’s not something that comes naturally to me, I have to work on it,” Le Carre told the Sunday

Times newspaper. Le Carre said Smiley had previously sacrificed his humanity for the sake of the Cold War “cause”.

Now “he has the humanity but the cause has been taken away from him,” the author said.

“The sense of allegiance to his country — which country? which Britain? — has disappeare­d,” he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme. The author, who turns 86 in October, has also opened up about his own spying past and spoke on Thursday about his activities as an “agent runner”.

“Quite contrary to the perception of agent running, this is a pastoral duty. You go in offering whatever you can offer — much more than just money and re-settlement. It’s companions­hip of a

kind,” he said.

The author has kept out of the gossip columns while continuing to work as a prolific writer after the fall of the Berlin Wall.

The novel which followed that historic moment, The Night Manager (1993), was transforme­d into a successful miniseries for British television.

Le Carre’s anti-heroes have been adapted for cinema or television six times, most recently in 2010 with Tinker Tailor

Soldier Spy, with actor Gary Oldman portraying Smiley on the hunt for a mole within Britain’s intelligen­ce services.

While Le Carre’s new novel, his 24th, sees a return to the intrigue of Cold War espionage, its pages were put together against a very different political backdrop.

While the dry detail of Brexit negotiatio­ns are unlikely to create a pageturner, Le Carre makes his europhile views clear in the novel when Guillam asks his former boss whether his life’s work was for Britain. “No. For Europe,” Smiley responds.

“I think his whole genesis in life — his private dream, as he now expresses it — is the salvation of Europe,” Le Carre said in his newspaper interview.

 ??  ?? John Le Carre
John Le Carre

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