The Borneo Post (Sabah)

British spy thriller author John le Carre dies aged 89

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LONDON: John le Carre, the British writer best known for his Cold War espionage novels ‘Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy’ and ‘The Spy Who Came In From The Cold’, has died aged 89, his agent and family said Sunday.

The author, a former British intelligen­ce officer whose real name was David Cornwell, wrote 25 novels and one memoir in a career spanning six decades, selling 60 million books worldwide.

His wife of nearly 50 years, Jane, and sons Nicholas, Timothy, Stephen and Simon, said in a statement that he died on Saturday night after a short battle with pneumonia.

“We all grieve deeply his passing,” they said, thanking staff at the hospital in Cornwall, southwest England, for their care. “We know they share our sadness,” they added.

‘Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy’ was adapted for television in 1979, with Alec Guinness starring as the enigmatic spycatcher George Smiley, and became a classic. Gary Oldman reprised the role in the 2011 film, winning an Oscar the following year.

“All who follow are in his debt,” Oldman said in a statement. “His characters were drawn deftly and deeply... For me, inhabiting George Smiley remains one of the highpoints of my life.”

His friend, the novelist Robert Harris, called le Carre ‘one of those writers who really was not only a brilliant writer but he also penetrated popular culture – and that’s a great rarity’.

Harris told Sky News television ‘The Spy Who Came In From The

Cold’ was a ‘masterpiec­e’.

“It’s an incredibly engrossing tale and very deep, and it transforme­d the writing of spy fiction. It was a brilliant, psychologi­cal portrait of spying and of betrayal and of the decline of British power.”

Stephen King, the bestsellin­g US author, called le Carre ‘a literary giant and a humanitari­an spirit’.

Jonny Geller, le Carre’s literary agent, said: “His like will never be seen again, and his loss will be felt by every book lover, everyone interested in the human condition.”

And historian Simon Sebag Montefiore said he was heartbroke­n at the death of a ‘titan of English literature’.

Tailor’s shop

Le Carre’s life could have been the stuff of fiction and he once said he owed his career in the shadows and later literary success to an ‘impulsive adolescent decision’ to flee an unhappy home life.

It involved a spell in Bern, Switzerlan­d, learning German, where he took his first steps in British intelligen­ce, doing oddjobs across the border in Austria.

From Switzerlan­d, he returned to Britain to study at Oxford University, then went on to teach at the elite Eton school before joining MI5, the country’s domestic intelligen­ce agency, in the late 1950s.

He later transferre­d to the overseas spy agency MI6, serving in the West German capital Bonn, where he witnessed the building of the Berlin Wall.

It was as an MI6 officer that he had his first success with ‘The Spy Who Came in from the Cold’ in 1963. For obvious reasons, he had to use a pseudonym.

“I was asked so many times why I chose this ridiculous name, then the writer’s imaginatio­n came to my help,” he told The Paris Review in 1996.

“I saw myself riding over Battersea Bridge (in London), on top of a bus, looking down at a tailor’s shop... and it was called something of this sort – le Carre.”

Big Pharma to Brexit

If Cold War intrigue and its tense, often bleak backdrop made his name and his books best-sellers, le Carre found new subject matter and a litany of characters and causes as the world changed.

They included arms dealers, Russian gangsters, financiers and Big Pharma, which he portrayed in the 2001 novel ‘The Constant Gardener’, later adapted into a film starring Ralph Fiennes and Rachel Weisz.

Despite his establishm­ent education and career, le Carre – a traditiona­list who admitted he could not type and wrote by hand – often railed against it.

He turned down a knighthood and was suspicious of literary honours. An avowed Europhile, he was also an outspoken critic of Brexit, and at the last general election in 2019 told AFP that Britons should ‘join the resistance’ against Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? File photo taken on Jan 30, le Carre poses after receiving the Olof Palme Award 2019 ‘for his engaging and humanistic opinion making in literary form regarding the freedom of the individual and the fundamenta­l issues of mankind’ at a ceremony in the Concert Hall Grünewalds­alen, in Stockholm, Sweden.
— AFP photo File photo taken on Jan 30, le Carre poses after receiving the Olof Palme Award 2019 ‘for his engaging and humanistic opinion making in literary form regarding the freedom of the individual and the fundamenta­l issues of mankind’ at a ceremony in the Concert Hall Grünewalds­alen, in Stockholm, Sweden.

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