Daily Express

Tinker, Tailor,

John le Carré, who has died aged 89, might have invented the modern spy novel. But perhaps his greatest creation was his own story

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OINFLUENCE: Le Carré as a young author, right, and his ‘ con man’ father Ronnie Cornwell, above going on. His father didn’t admit until he [ le Carré] was an adult that he’d served a jail term, and his mother left late at night without saying goodbye,” said Sisman. As a boy, le Carré told school friends his father had been a spy.

Sisman explained: “He was of a generation, during the war, that what your dad did was terribly crucial. Ronnie was that most despised person, a war profiteer, rather than away at the front fighting in the army.” He was sent to Sherborne, the Dorset public school, but ran away when he was 17. And here the truth and the fiction of his life start to collide – he claimed he’d been recruited by MI5 to spy on student groups in Bern, Switzerlan­d. Later on, as an Oxford undergradu­ate, he spied on left- wing fellow students. Well, he may have – and then again, perhaps not: “Part of his problem was that he told different stories [ about his life] at different times and no longer knew what was true,” says Sisman, who spent hours talking with the author.

What is certainly true is that he did his National Service in the Army Intelligen­ce Corps where he learnt the tradecraft of running low- grade agents in the communist Eastern Bloc.

He then spent two years teaching at Eton – “Its snobbishne­ss appalled him, and he wrote cruel portraits of two of its beaks [ masters] in A Murder of Quality,” recalled the historian Kenneth Rose – before joining the Foreign Office. There, he finally entered the twilight world of espionage, working at the British Embassy in Bonn as a Second Secretary, the usual secret agent’s cover.

Part of his job was to interrogat­e Czech defectors. As he worked in the intelligen­ce records department he started to scribble down ideas for spy stories, and his first novel,

DARK DEALINGS: Tom Hiddleston and Elizabeth Debicki in The Night Manager

Call For the Dead, was published in 1961 while he still toiled undercover.

When his third novel, The Spy Who Came In From The Cold, was turned into a film starring Richard Burton, he took up writing fulltime, producing 25 novels over the next six decades as well as short stories, screenplay­s and non- fiction.

Though undoubtedl­y Britain’s most successful literary novelist, he refused all thoughts of accepting an honour – “There will never be a Sir David Cornwell,” he declared. For although he gave the appearance of being patrician and for all the world a product of the upper- classes, le Carré remained an outsider, refusing for years to allow interviews and discouragi­ng journalist­s from uncovering his espionage past or messy personal life. But you didn’t need to be a psychiatri­st to trace le Carré’s infidelity to his miserable childhood.

Indeed, in his books all roads lead back to those early years – most revealingl­y portrayed in A Perfect Spy ( 1986), possibly his finest book. In it, Magnus Pym is a British

‘ He grew up in a house full of mysteries... brought up in a world of deceit you had to fabricate’

spy who betrays his country, and as the tale unfolds we learn of his charismati­c con man father Rick Pym, a photofit of Ronnie Cornwell, who at one time was an associate of the notorious Kray twins who led organised crime in London for a decade.

Le Carré’s father made and lost several fortunes through elaborate confidence schemes – his period in jail was for insurance fraud. Another biographer, Lynndianne Beene, described Ronnie as “an epic con man of little education, immense charm, extravagan­t tastes, but no social values”.

The author himself confessed: “Although I’ve never been to a shrink, writing A Perfect Spy is probably what a very wise shrink would have advised me to do anyway.”

In his autobiogra­phy, The Pigeon Tunnel, he claimed to have been dispatched to postwar Paris by Ronnie aged 16 where he narrowly escaped seduction by a diplomat and his wife. It was 1947 and the teenager had been sent by his roguish father to collect a £ 500 debt from the

Panamanian ambassador to France. Having been plied with alcohol, the “most desirable” woman he had ever seen “kicked off a shoe and caressed my leg with a stockinged toe” before her husband “decided we were ready for bed”. Making his excuses, le Carré left alone and slept on a park bench.

The “sensuous, unfulfille­d” night would inspire works such as The Tailor Of Panama. Years later, he failed to find the house and

SMILEY’S PEOPLE: Gary Oldman, right, took the role first played by Alec Guinness

LITERARY GENIUS: But le Carré had a troubled relationsh­ip with his father restaurant and later still while visiting Panama on a research trip, he made enquiries about his erstwhile host but nobody could recall a count from Panama. In his 2016 memoir, he wrote: “Nobody had heard of the fellow. A count? From Panama? It seemed most improbable. Maybe I had dreamed the whole thing?”

Le Carré, who reportedly amassed a £ 75million fortune, married twice – first in 1954 to Alison Sharp and then to Valerie Eustace. There were three sons from the first marriage. His son from the second writes novels under the name Nick Harkaway.

For the past 40 years le Carré lived between north London and St Buryan in Cornwall, eventually buying himself a mile of clifftop on which he could walk around, voicing his latest characters and plots.

His final published work, Agent Running In The Field, came out last year – but he never ceased working up to his final illness, and it’s not unreasonab­le to hope for one final book under his name before too long.

Let’s hope it’s a Smiley!

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