The Spy Who Came In from the Cold (George Smiley, #3) (2024)

Bill Kerwin

Author2 books83.6k followers

August 14, 2020


I am of two minds now that I have finished The Spy Who Came in From the Cold for the first time: I am irritated at myself for having postponed the pleasure of reading this magnificent book for so many years, and yet I am exhilarated and excited too, marked by this unqualified encounter with greatness.

I certainly was stupid all these years, for I did not read this book—at least in part--because I considered it “just a spy novel” (albeit a superb one), and the “spy novel"—at least since Ian Fleming ruined it—is not one of my favorite genres. But The Spy Who Came in From the Cold is only “just a spy novel” in the sense that Moby Dick and “The Secret Sharer” are “just sea tales” or “The Turn of the Screw” and “Afterward” are “just ghost stories." Sure, they fulfill the requirements of their genres. But they are much—oh, so much—more.

In the course of this tale of a complex double-agent operation, which he tells in a style that somehow combines both cold rage and white heat, Le Carre reveals the heartlessness of British Intelligence—and, by implication, of all intelligence systems—which will not hesitate to crush the innocent and betray its own in pursuit of secrecy and success. No matter whose side they are on, or what their particular goals may be, there can be no heroes in this dirty, duplicitous game.

I do not think of other spy novels when I think of The Spy Who Came in From the Cold. Instead I think of the great writers of the English language: Conrad (the bitter isolation of the characters), Koestler (the fierce subtlety of the interrogations), and Orwell (the bleak vision of the state).

And yet—this is part of what makes the book great—The Spy Who Came in From the Cold is an excellent spy story too, with an intricate plot which will keep you guessing all the way to the end. Yes, Le Carre offers the reader of spy stories everything he could wish for.

Except a hero.

    spies-intrigue

Jeffrey Keeten

Author6 books251k followers

May 25, 2023

”What do you think spies are: priests, saints, and martyrs? They’re a squalid procession of vain fools, traitors too, yes; pansies, sadists, and drunkards, people who play cowboys and Indians to brighten their rotten lives. Do you think they sit like monks in London balancing the rights and wrongs?”

The Spy Who Came In from the Cold (George Smiley, #3) (3)
Checkpoint Charlie where it all begins.

John Le Carre A.K.A. David John Moore Cornwell while in college started working for MI5 and then later transferred to MI6. He worked as a consul (code for spy) for the British Embassy in Germany and that is where he saw something that would spur the creation of the most influential spy novel of all time.

”It was the Berlin Wall that had got me going, of course: I had flown from Bonn to take a look at it as soon as it started going up. I went with a colleagues from the Embassy and as we stared back at the weasel faces of the brainwashed little thugs who guarded the Kremlin’s latest battlement, he told me to wipe the grin off my face. I was not aware I had been grinning, so it must have been one of those soupy grins that comes over me at dreadfully serious moments. There was certainly nothing but disgust and terror, which was exactly what I was supposed to feel: the Wall was perfect theatre as well as a perfect symbol of the monstrosity of ideology gone mad.”

This moment spawned The Spy Who Came in From the Cold.

He’d written two little novels, almost novellas, where he introduces his character George Smiley. Smiley is in this novel as well, a shadowy figure behind the scenes which is where he works best. He can pull strings, and at the same time smooth the path, dropping just the right amount of crumbs to lead enemies into making assumptions. (we all know the ditty about assumptions) Cornwell wrote these books under an assumed name to protect himself from blowback which was prudent given the nature of his clandestine work. When Spy is published and it stays on the US bestseller list for over a year all pretenses of anonymity are replaced with the exact opposite...celebrity.

The Spy Who Came In from the Cold (George Smiley, #3) (4)
The Spy, David Cornwell, who wrote novels, John Le Carre.

Le Carre has an interest in secrets. He wants to understand them, and the need that people have to keep them. His father Ronnie was a man that probably would have made a great spy if he hadn’t decided to be a criminal instead. Much to Le Carre’s ongoing embarrassment Ronnie was eventually jailed for insurance fraud and was frequently on the verge of bankruptcy.

"His father, Ronnie, made and lost his fortune a number of times due to elaborate confidence tricks and schemes which landed him in prison on at least one occasion. This was one of the factors that led to le Carré's fascination with secrets."

His father also had business dealings with the notorious Kray Twins who were London gangsters in the 1960s. I recently ordered a book on the Kray Twins because...well...look at them. I must know more.

The Spy Who Came In from the Cold (George Smiley, #3) (5)
Reginald and Ronald Kray

Spying and committed fraud are not so far apart on the scale of unsavory professions, so those aspects that may have made Ronnie a con artist are exactly the same attributes that made his son a good spy.

So Smiley is relegated to the shadows and in the forefront is Alec Leamas.

”He had an attractive face, muscular, and a stubborn line to his thin mouth. His eyes were brown and small; Irish, some said. It was hard to place Leamas. If he were to walk into a London club the porter would certainly not mistake him for a member; in a Berlin night club they usually gave him the best table. He looked like a man who could make trouble, a man who looked after his money, a man who was not quite a gentleman.”

The Spy Who Came In from the Cold (George Smiley, #3) (6)
The intensity of Richard Burton playing Alec Leamas in the movie brought the fictional character to life.

Leamas was head of the Berlin branch until too many things went wrong. His network of spies had been dismantled one by one by his arch enemy Mundt, head of the East German Intelligence. When I say dismantled I mean dead and by dead I mean murdered. Leamas is recalled to London where in a meeting with Control, head of the Circus; and of course, Smiley is there, a plan is hatched to bring Mundt down.

It is going to have to take a con, not the short con, but the long con. It would take time to turn Leamas from a reasonably respectable man into a man that is desperate enough to want to sell his country’s secrets.

First step, he must begin drinking copious amounts of alcohol, not a hard chore given his penchant for heavy drinking anyway. Second, they find him a job shelving books in a library a job so mundane for most people (you know... norms) it would create desperation. The plan goes slightly awry when he meets Liz, who also works at the library. Later when he is at one of his bleakest moments behind the Iron Curtain he realizes that Liz has given him something to hope for beyond just the success of this mission.

The Spy Who Came In from the Cold (George Smiley, #3) (7)
Claire Bloom stars as Liz in the 1965 movie.

”He knew what it was then that Liz had given him; the thing that he would have to go back and find if ever he got home to England: it was the caring about little things----the faith in ordinary life; the simplicity that made you break up a bit of bread into paper bag, walk down to the beach, and throw it to the gulls. It was this respect for triviality which he had never been allowed to possess; whether it was bread for the seagulls or love, whatever it was he would go back and find it; he would make Liz find it for him.”

To me, anyone who can inspire those thoughts in another person is a beautiful human being.

The diabolical thing about Smiley is that what seems random is simply a carefully planned roll of loaded dice. As the pieces of plot fall into place my respect for Smiley continues grow right along with a leeriness of ever wanting my fate in his hands. Being a weighed risk before men such as Control, Smiley, or Mundt is like waiting for a judgment from Pontius Pilate. Though this is a short book the plot is heavy, forcing the reader to pay close attention, to ponder each revelation, and still be left at the end with doubts about who among the main players pulled the final string. I will defer to Graham Greene’s assessment of this book. ”The best spy story I have ever read.”

The Spy Who Came In from the Cold (George Smiley, #3) (8)

I also watched the 1965 British movie starring Richard Burton. This was a reread and a rewatch for me, but so much water has went under the bridge that much of it was new again or at least being seen, being read, with older, hopefully wiser eyes. The movie is faithful to the book. Many great novels inspire great movies and many great novels/great movies inspire future writers. The overall impact of this novel on the genre is hard to calculate, but it is impossible to deny that this book set the bar high for all writers who try to write a better one.

My Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy Review

If you wish to see more of my most recent book and movie reviews, visit http://www.jeffreykeeten.com
I also have a Facebook blogger page at:https://www.facebook.com/JeffreyKeeten

    book-to-film spies-espionage

Adina (way behind on reviews, no notifications)

1,125 reviews4,709 followers

October 17, 2020

In the past two years I’ve started watching more spy movies/tv-series and also read a spy-thriller by Daniel Silva. I saw two movies based on Le Carré's books (Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy and A most Wanted Man) which I enjoyed. As a result, I was looking forward to reading one of Le Carré’s books.

This is a different kind of spy novel, a smart one with a brilliant plot and some exciting twists. There are no hot dudes drinking martinis with a woman on each leg, shooting every terrorist in sight. Despite that, it is still gripping and additionally, it makes you think. The characters have personality and the line between good and evil is not as clear as in other spy thrillers. It meditates around what are the limits that a spy should or should not cross to achieve the Goal and what are the motivations behind choosing this job.

    1001 berlin british

Vit Babenco

1,619 reviews4,770 followers

September 25, 2022

A secret world within the apparent one… An invisible war…
And in this clandestine warfare John le Carré is on its psychological and moral side…

“I know how these things go – all offensive operations. They have by-products, take sudden turns in unexpected directions. You think you’ve caught one fish and you find you’ve caught another.”

As far as I understand ‘to be out in the cold’ in the spy jargon means ‘to be on special covert assignment’.
The secret world is small but everything in it is extremely complex… Existence under wraps… Causes and effects… Moves and countermoves… Strikes and counter strike… And even the most experienced and inveterate denizens of this world often can’t predict the result…
“What do you think spies are: priests, saints and martyrs? They’re a squalid procession of vain fools, traitors too, yes; pansies, sadists and drunkards, people who play cowboys and Indians to brighten their rotten lives. Do you think they sit like monks in London balancing the rights and wrongs?”

Espionage isn’t an adventurous trip – it is a deadly psychological combat.

Fergus, Quondam Happy Face

1,204 reviews17.7k followers

October 31, 2024

I read this book shortly after it appeared, having the benefit of a mother who was an aficionado of every good book review she read in The New York Times or Kirkus Reviews, to both of which she subscribed.

With that advantage she also had been given free reign by town hall to order whatever book had stellar ratings and would consequently enjoy a big circulation in the library she ran for them.

Furthermore, if she loved a book she would tell me about it, and I'd borrow it.

And that way I could read great extracurricular books in my teen years at no cost...

But my marks naturally suffered as a result!

That year, when I turned thirteen, I abhorred George Smiley's Circus and its bitter sang froid with regards to the slightest touch of humanism.

I was all teen emotion at the time, but later would naturally see the Circus' hidden humanity once le Carre's own humanism mellowed with age.

Appreciation for workplace excellence will do that to you.

You let down your guard with sheer admiration!

So it was with President Kennedy in the previous year, as his finger hovered over the red nuclear button, like Peter Sellers in Dr Strangelove.

The only great guts and glory I could see in such machismo at the time was the vision of what we'd all turn into AFTER it was pushed!

Now, of course, much older, I only see Kennedy's sheer stamina and bravery -

Just as I now know that for Alex Leamas, inhuman political expediency was a calculated risk back then, given the grim times.

However, now with Coronavirus, careful and humane medical treatment in many areas is sadly lacking due to sheer volume of cases.

Are we now, perhaps, finding ourselves once again in the crisis-averse deep waters of starkly expedient measures?

Lyn

1,937 reviews17.2k followers

December 18, 2018

A few years ago the Broadway musical “Wicked” came to Nashville and my family and I went to experience this production at the Tennessee Performing Arts Theater. I have actually seen a musical on Broadway (Rock of Ages) and I was impressed. But this was something else entirely. I was awestruck by the talent: the singing, the acting, the stage production. As you may imagine, this was not my usual forte. Oh, I can walk across a room and avoid dragging my knuckles (most days) but for the most part a presentation of this sort is beyond me; but I can at least acknowledge the virtuosity of a performance, even if it is not in a medium to which I am normally accustomed.

Spy novels, likewise, are not in a genre to which I am inclined. Nonetheless, I know when I see greatness and this must certainly be, like Graham Greene stated, the best spy novel I’ve ever read.

First of all, I was astounded by Le Carre’s mastery of prose language.

“They walked to her flat through the rain and they might have been anywhere – Berlin, London, any town where paving stones turn to lakes of light in the evening rain, and the traffic shuffles despondently through wet streets.”

Le Carre delivers this level of artistry in page after page of prose reminiscent of Graham Greene, or obliquely, like Malcolm Lowry. This is simply a very well written book.

Add to that the psychological depth and the labyrinthine twists and turns of the interactions between east and west operatives and there is little doubt why this novel has collected such accolades. A book that rises above its labeled genre and becomes simply a brilliant story. Le Carre could have described competing stationary merchants and this would have been interesting.

Most impressive is that Le Carre eschews convention, deliberately rejects Hollywood sentimentality and tells this straight. He makes his case as it should be, as it must be.

Bravo.

** 2018 - My wife and I visited Berlin this year and went to Checkpoint Charlie, it was kind of surreal. Beautiful city BTW.

The Spy Who Came In from the Cold (George Smiley, #3) (13)

Candi

677 reviews5,158 followers

February 20, 2019

"Intelligence work has one moral law—it is justified by results."

After having just met George Smiley for the first time last month, I admit I was a bit disappointed to hear that he would not be featured prominently in this novel. I should not have worried in the least, however, because Alec Leamas as leading man in this book was every bit as compelling a character as was Smiley. If you are looking for a glamorous spy novel, you should look elsewhere. If you are in search of a smart, realistic look at the business of espionage, then this book and author John le Carré will more than satisfy that desire. This was excellent! I am officially hooked on this series.

"We have to live without sympathy, don’t we? That’s impossible of course. We act it to one another, all this hardness; but we aren’t like that really, I mean . . . one can’t be out in the cold all the time; one has to come in from the cold . . . d’you see what I mean?"

Leamas has just returned to London from Berlin and a bleak, Cold War assignment. He is yearning to come in from the cold and remove that burdensome cloak which is the habiliment of the British intelligence officer. But the powers that be have other plans for him, and Leamas finds himself in what is perhaps his most dangerous and friendless role of all on the other side of the Iron Curtain. He has been assigned the formidable task of dethroning the head of the East German Intelligence agency, one of the most ruthless men imaginable. There are plenty of twists and turns throughout and you really need to keep your eye on the ball at all times to keep up. Leamas is a fascinating character, and I often found myself trying to determine when he was showing us glimpses of his true self and when he was staying in character as a spy.

"Aware of the overwhelming temptations which assail a man permanently isolated in his deceit, Leamas resorted to the course which armed him best; even when he was alone, he compelled himself to live with the personality he had assumed… Only very rarely, as now, going to bed that evening, did he allow himself the dangerous luxury of admitting the great lie he lived."

You’ll find plenty of suspense and just enough action in "The Spy Who Came in from the Cold." There is romance – don’t worry if you don’t have a sweet tooth, it’s far from sugary. There is good and evil and all that murky area in between. And, of course, I can’t fail to mention the brilliant writing once again. Highly recommended for fans of the genre and those that may like to dip into a spy thriller now and again.

"What do you think spies are: priests, saints, and martyrs? They’re a squalid procession of vain fools, traitors too, yes; pansies, sadists, and drunkards, people who play cowboys and Indians to brighten their rotten lives."

    espionage favorites kindle-book-i-own

Paula K

440 reviews412 followers

October 16, 2018

Winner of the Edgar and Dagger awards, The Spy Who Came in from the Cold is a wonderfully written International espionage novel. John Le Carre’s 1963 classic is undoubtedly the most intelligent, dark, and ominous spy novel of it’s time.

Earlier this year I read A Legacy of Spies, written in 2017 by Le Carre, so it made so much sense to dive into his classic Cold War novel as a follow-up. The author, who worked for British Intelligence, brings so much authenticity to his novels.

The book centers around British agent Alec Leamus who is asked by headquarters to go “back into the cold” for one last assignment before retirement. Leamus plays the role of a disenchanted, drunk set on taking down Mundt, the head of East German intelligence, who killed off Alec’s team in Europe. As the team’s demise was considered Alec’s fault, his role playing is quite realistic to the other side.

The Spy Who Came in from the Cold is gritty with superb dialogue. There is no loss to plenty of twists and turns. It also shows that good and bad are not so clear-cut. I listened to the e-audio which is narrated by the formidable Brian Cox, an Emmy award winning Scottish actor. Most recently, I have enjoyed watching him perform as a media mogul in HBO’s new 2018 drama series, Succession, which I highly recommend if you like intelligent and witty banter.

4.5 out of 5 stars

    classic dagger-award e-audio

Michael Finocchiaro

Author3 books5,987 followers

April 5, 2022

Perhaps the greatest spy novel ever, it is chilling (as cold as the title) and realistic and hair-raising. A true classic!

Smiley takes a back seat in this extraordinary Cold War spy thriller hitch shows the true hypocrisy on both sides of the Berlin Wall. There are so many twists and turns in the story that it reads very quickly. It is a fantastic novel, one of Le Carré’s best.

What Le Carré really excels at is getting into the psychology of each actor in the story and building up the pressure up to the climax which happens on the very final pages. He was never one for a long denouement. This one features a beautiful love story with a double (at least) agent and is set in the Cold War on both sides of the Berlin Wall. For those in the back of the room with the red hats, Russia was and still is the bad guy on the other side of the wall, even if the name has changed and even if we are not perfect on our side.
I am at pains to say much more because the book is so short (and breathtaking on nearly every page) that more details or analysis would inevitably lead to spoilers.

So, just take a long afternoon on a cold weekend before the end of the winter, and curl up on the couch with this one. Let me know what you think!

    classics english-20th-c favorites

Kai Spellmeier

Author7 books14.7k followers

April 11, 2018

“It is said that men condemned to death are subject to sudden moments of elation; as if, like moths in the fire, their destruction were coincidental with attainment.”

Wow, that was boring. And I did not even have any expectations towards it. But calling it "the best spy novel ever", as so many reviewers have done, is a teensy bit far-stretched. I don't have much to say about this book. If you want to read it because you expect action and thrill and incredible escape plans or impossible heists, you better move on to the next book. If there was any action, we only hear of it after it has already happened, through reports and dialogues. The characters are overall bland, especially the female love interest, who, of course, is roughly 20 years younger than the main character. She only exists so she can sit prettily and cry a lot. It was a severely well-plotted story, no doubt, but it failed to spark any intrigue from my side. The coolest thing about it is the cover design.

Find more of my books on Instagram

    owned

Jaline

444 reviews1,810 followers

October 30, 2017

This is the novel that placed John Le Carré firmly on the path of fame and fortune. It was his breakthrough novel and 50 years later he was still telling people it had nothing to do with his previous job in the Secret Service; that it was a figment of his imagination only; that had it been based on any facts whatsoever, it would never have been allowed into publication.

None of that registered at the time with the media and critics. And those old rumours still hang in shabby tatters to this day. The consensus was that if John Le Carré protested its validity, it was only to save face for the Secret Service. In his 10-page Foreword to this novel, he said that his job involved information gathering and he didn’t do it all that well because even then his imagination got in the way. He also said that where the world saw a spy who became a writer, the reality is that he was always a writer first and happened to be in the spy business – on a low rung of the ladder – until he could manage to get by on his writing.

I believe him. Not because his spy novels aren’t first-rate; they are. And maybe I might not have been so quick to believe him 50 years ago; I may not have. I do believe him now, though, and if you read the Foreward, you will likely believe him, too.

This novel is the first one that details an actual operation. George Smiley plays a peripheral role as most of the story revolves around Alec Leamas. Another one of his people has been killed and he is getting tired of it. Mundt, who also featured as the “bad guy” in a previous novel, is the one who set it up so Alec gets behind the idea generated by Headquarters of an elaborate sting operation behind the Iron Curtain to eliminate Mundt.

The pace of this novel is fast – very fast. The action moves swiftly through the prep work for the operation and as Alec sinks deeper into the role he needs to play it is sometimes hard to tell when he is the ‘real’ Alec Leamas and when he is the ‘character’ playing a pivotal role in the operation. He is just that good. During the race to complete the mission before something goes too far awry, sometimes the bad guys aren’t the worst guys, and sometimes the worst guys are better than they seem. Or are they?

It’s a topsy turvy world, this spy business, and this book has it all. The ending could have been happier, and I probably would have written it a bit differently. However, no-one asked me to, and I bow to John Le Carré’s superior skill in writing a fitting ending for a heart-racing, heartbreaking spy novel.

    xx2017-completed

Sanjay

245 reviews493 followers

December 12, 2015

A profound book, that surpassed all my expectations. A hell of a ride from the first page till the last word. It's a cold and dark book which is written very intelligently.

It was hailed as one of the best among the world's top classic espionage-books ever written. And, now that I see in hindsight, it has truly surpassed all the spy thrillers, in terms of quality and scope, that I've read before reading this one; and it has now climbed the ladder to reach the top - in my all time favorite list.

Highly Recommended!

Ahmad Sharabiani

9,563 reviews510 followers

May 23, 2021

The Spy Who Came In from the Cold, John le Carré

The Spy Who Came in from the Cold is a 1963 Cold War spy novel by the British author John le Carré.

The West Berlin office of the Circus is under the command of Station Head Alec Leamas, who served as an SOE (Special Operations Executive) operative during World War II, and fought in the Nazi-occupied Netherlands and Norway. ...

تاریخ نخستین خوانش: روز دوم ماه ژوئن سال 2012میلادی

عنوان: جاسوسی که از سردسیر آمد؛ نویسنده: جان لوکاره؛ مترجم فرزاد فرید؛ تهران، موسسه فرهنگی - هنری جهان کتاب‏‫، 1390؛ در 286ص؛‬‬ فروست مجموعه نقاب، 10؛ شابک 9789642533589؛ چاپ دوم 1392؛ موضوع داستانهای نویسندگان بریتانیایی - سده 20م

رمان «جاسوسی که از سردسیر آمد»، سومین رمان «جان لوکاره» و نخستین اثر ایشانست که پیروزیهای بین المللی را برای نویسنده به ارمغان آورد؛ «لوکاره» در این رمان، جهانی را میآفرند که مشابهش در هیچ یک از آثار داستانی و معمایی پیشین ایشان به دیده نیامده؛ این نویسنده با بهره گیری از دانش و پیشینه ی خویش از سالهای فعالیتش در سازمان جاسوسی «انگلستان»، پشت پرده ی رویدادها و معادلات جاسوسیهای بین المللی را با توصیفاتی جذاب و فراموش نشدنی به تصویر کشیده اند؛ داستان کتاب، به مأموری «انگلیسی» به نام «الک لیماس» میپردازند که بسیار تمایل دارد تا حرفه اش را کنار بگذارد، اما پیش از آن، باید آخرین و شاید دشوارترین مأموریت خود را به سرانجام برساند�� زمانیکه آخرین مأمور تحت فرمان «لیماس» کشته شده، و او برای بازگشت به «لندن» فراخوانده میشود، امیدی به پایان جاسوس بازیها در دل او شکل میگیرد؛ اما مقام ارشد «لیماس»، نقشه های دیگری در سر دارد؛ مقام ارشد که تصمیم دارد، رئیس سازمان جاسوسی «آلمان شرقی» را از پا درآورده، و آن سازمان را نابود کند، بار دیگر «لیماس» را به دل آشوب میفرستد؛ او اینبار باید نقش جاسوسی خائن را ایفا کند، و اعتماد دشمن را، برای زدن ضربه ی نهایی به آنها به دست آورد؛ در آغاز داستان «لیماس» در غرب دیوار «برلین»، به انتظار فرار یکی از اصلیترین منابعش از آنسوی دیوار است؛ و ...؛

تاریخ بهنگام رسانی 01/03/1400هجری خورشیدی؛ ا. شربیانی

Emily May

2,100 reviews315k followers

May 12, 2011


I'd like to start by saying "woah" and various other exclamations of surprise and wonder. This was a book that completely changed the way I view spy novels. My previous prejudice stems from quite an obvious source - Ian Fleming - who never gave me anything much of what I would want to read about or what I even find remotely interesting. Big guns, fast cars, hot girls... surely every teenage boy's wet dream, but not what tends to be my cup of tea.

Fleming, like most writers of spy novels, caters exclusively for the straight male reader. His books were never intended to be read by women because in real life women don't fall back with their legs in the air for every guy in a tux who says "shaken, not stirred". Laughable.

And, yes, there is a point hidden somewhere amidst the waffle... John le Carre is a genius, an inventive and wonderful writer. I effin loved this book... it was gripping, sad and funny! Alec didn't waste his time drinking martinis and shagging his way through the women of Europe, he had emotion and he had personality. Alec Leamas would run rings around James Bond any day and in every way possible.

Written in 1963, it was inevitably entwined with the Cold War and the darkest side of East German Intelligence. There's nothing like fiction with aspects of historical and/or political truth! And I guess what I'm really trying to say is that I simply adored it... and I want more of John le Carre right now. Highly recommended, even to you chick-lit lovers who will automatically think "no thanks", trust me you want to give this one a chance.

    mystery-thriller

Brina

1,125 reviews4 followers

January 30, 2019

A few thoughts that I jotted down. I am on vacation this week so Le Carre was appropriate reading for a trip. A group of buddy readers in the group reading for pleasure is reading through Le Carre’s novels, and I join them from time to time. This installment of George Smiley introduces readers to Alec Leamas, an intelligence officer who Control is convincing to come in from the cold, that is to retire from the service. For any man accustomed to constant action and being on one’s toes, searching out double agents at a time when the western world was divided and on edge, retiring is not so simple. Le Carre allows readers to explore Alec’s conscious, making this episode much more cerebral than the usual spy thrillers I am used to. Our group will be reading the entire Smiley series, and, as each book can be read as a stand alone, I will be joining them whenever I have time permitting.

4 stars

    cold-war england spy-espionage

Paul Bryant

2,331 reviews11.4k followers

February 6, 2014

I hate everything about spies and spying, whether it's the stupid raised-eyebrow-perfect-martini-black-tied begadgeted supermodel-is-in-the-shower my-name-is-Bollocks, James Bollocks nonsense or the miserable version : everybody can be bought there are no morals any more in this grey world and also it's always fooking raining, my feet hurt, my dog died, I never have sex and I'll meet you near Checkpoint Charlie in Berlin so you can say something incomprehensible to me and I can back to you and then some guy in Czechoslovakia will get killed because of it two years later who cares.

So I read this one by John Le Carre who is like the Raymond Chandler of spy books like everyone reads them even if they hate their genres, like some people go on about Bix Beiderbecke who actually hate jazz and some other people bought one non-rock cd in their entire life and it was the Buena Vista Social Club; only Raymond Chandler was a god and he was funny. John le Carre - not so funny.

Well it was okay. It didn't light my sandals on fire or make me hire a van with a PA system to go riding around town extolling its virtues. (Which is something I do with books I like a lot, I've been fined so many times for it, but I think it's worth it.)

But it was who is the mole you are the mole I am the mole we are all moles but the mole is not the mole.

Or wait, maybe that was the plot of Tinker Tailor Soldier Mole which I also read.

Blah, moles. Can't tell one from the other.

    novels

Steven Godin

2,679 reviews3,008 followers

July 25, 2017

Fleming gave it a glamorous touch, Ludlum bought added thrills, but le Carré writes of espionage with a cold starkness that is far more believable and all the better for it. There are no car chases, gadgets, tuxedos, martini's, or large breasted women walking out of the ocean throwing their long locks back over their pretty faces. This is so far away from the exotic travels of 007, mainly taking in the sights of airports, road checkpoints, chilly rooms and deserted streets, le Carré shows a Europe lingering in the darkness of the cold war, and paints a grey and gloomy picture of just about everyone involved, the pacing in slow but very intelligent in it's full bodied descriptions of life as a spy, and sadly for those involved this is a dull and rather empty existence, where they give up so much for Queen and country, but have little to show for it. It's a boring way to make a living, but someone has to do it right?.
o
Events unfold with Burnt out British spy Alec Leamas returning to London after complications regarding an operation in Berlin, and is then seemingly hung out to dry by the agency. Cut adrift he turns to the bottle and tries to make some sort of a normal life for himself, with little funds he takes a job in a library, befriends a fellow worker called Liz, and they strike up an affection for each other. Paranoid, always glancing over his shoulder, he gets the sense of being followed, and here it conjures up images of shady looking individuals, with turned up collars on their dark coloured macs walking through fog, sounding echos coming from footsteps on wet tarmac, yes it really is this way. And after agreeing to return to Germany with other figures of intelligence he appears to turn defector through a friendly interrogation to his previous work, giving up names, banks, phoney passports and members of his organization whilst stationed in East Germany. But of course with this type of setting, nothing is as it it seems, there may or may not be, double crossings, set-ups, and lies within our midst!

On the surface the story is pretty basic and easy to follow, but deep within this novel there is so much more going on, that not always makes a whole lot of sense, it's not a case of joining all the dots at the end, although you can look at it this way, it's the taut and murky characters that really get you thinking, how you interpret their actions, and just what is going on behind the scenes, because sometimes it's not so much what's written in front of you, but where this world exists off the pages that truly makes for an authentic reading experience.
Graham Greene quotes it as the best spy novel ever written, who am I to argue.

    fiction great-britain

Matthew

1,221 reviews9,811 followers

November 22, 2017

I think if I had lived through more of the Cold War I would have enjoyed this book more. Even though it is not a very long book, I found it somewhat slow. Also, it was a fairly complicated story that had me confused and going back to figure out if I missed something.

I may have given it two stars, but the ultimate point and climax of the story was interesting. I kept having to clear my mind and put myself back into the serious mentality of the Cold War. I am too used to the James Bond/Hollywood ideal of spies and espionage in this era. It was much darker and convoluted than that. Having the Berlin Wall as a locale a few times in the book definitely stressed the intensity of the time period.

If you like serious historical fiction, post WWII cold war tales, and don't mind your characters grittier than James Bond, I think you will enjoy this one a lot.

    2017 completist-book-club kindle

Dem

1,236 reviews1,343 followers

January 27, 2021

Upon hearing of the passing of David John Moore Cornwell (better known by his pen name John le Carre) in December, I realised I hadn't read a novel by him or even had one on my TBR list. I was aware for that he worked for both MI5 and MI 16 during the 1950s and 60s and went on to become a very successful author. Having just finished and enjoyed Agent Sonya: Moscow's Most Daring Wartime Spy I really was in the mood for another spy novel. While Agent Sonya is a non fiction read I was assured by a friend that John le Carre's novel reads like Non Fiction.

A story of love and betrayal, the protagonist Alex Lemas has had enough of the spying game and wants to "to come in out of the cold" but in order to do so he must perform one final assignment which will take him deep into the heart of communist Germany and betray his country.

Without a doubt this is a very convincingly written spy thriller , and I think you find the author imputed his experiences and feelings into this novel. You get a feel for the world of the spy and cant help getting drawn into the the whole espoinage game. This is a short but fast paced novel and there are lots of twists and turns to keep the reader interested. I really enjoy novels written in this time frame and so glad I gave this one a shot.

I listened to this book on audible and the narrator was excellent. An entertaining and worthwhile read and another novel for my favourites list.

    thriller-crime war

Madeline

794 reviews47.9k followers

June 23, 2010

This is on the list of 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die, which means we are to respect it as a Very Important Book and give it a good rating. If I'm being honest, I guess it deserves this ranking. The characters are compelling, the dialogue is good, there are no superfluous scenes, and the whole thing has a creepy and secretive atmosphere that's very compelling.

But I cannot in good conscience give this more than two stars, for the simple reason that, for the majority of the book, I never had any idea what was going on.

The story, to give you some idea of what I mean, can be best summed up like this: Leamas is a British spy in the 50's dealing with the Soviets. He wants to retire from the service and grudgingly agrees to do one last job, even though he is Getting Too Old For This Shit. His job: get fired from the service, fall into disgrace, get recruited by Soviets, double-cross them and take out a former British agent who's working for Berlin now. (if you've seen The Departed you can kinda guess how it goes) Then there's a trial, which is weird, because I kinda thought the whole purpose of being a spy was the ability to work outside the confines of the law, but whatever. So there's a lot of secrecy going on, and the problem is that le Carre often doesn't bother to let the readers in on the secrets. Code phrases are used and not explained, past characters and events are referenced frequently as if we're supposed to know who/what they are (to the point where I thought I had accidentally picked up a book that was part of a series), and Leamas (our unreliable narrator) certainly ain't talking.

Also, the book is about Soviet Germany in the 50's, which put me at an immediate disadvantage. Look, I was born in 1989 - I just don't know that much about post-WWII Soviet politics, and they frankly don't interest me enough to do background research just so I can understand this story. When I found myself trying to remember which side of the Berlin Wall was the Communist one, I knew I was out of my league. This is a good story, the problem was that it just went over my head completely and I wasn't able to appreciate it as much as I should have.

"There's only one law in this game. ...What do you think spies are: priests, saints and martyrs? They're a squalid procession of vain fools, traitors too, yes; pansies, sadists and drunkards, people who play cowboys and Indians to brighten their rotten lives. Do you think they sit like monks in London balancing the rights and wrongs? ...This is a war. It's graphic and unpleasant because it's fought on a tiny scale, at close range; fought with a wastage of innocent life sometimes, I admit. But it's nothing, nothing at all beside other wars - the last or the next."

    the-list

Murray

Author147 books704 followers

June 7, 2024

an Orwellian tragedy

Exactly like something Orwell might write. By the end, I was thinking: This is Orwellian. It is a macabre satire on Communism and Capitalism and the people who get swallowed up by the chasm in-between.

A significant novel about the death games of espionage and all the trickery and justification that come with.

[I understand Le Carré felt this novel failed because it romanticized espionage. I didn’t feel romanticized at all.]

This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.

Kemper

1,390 reviews7,452 followers

April 24, 2011

It’s been over 20 years since the Berlin Wall fell, and as someone who grew up in the 1970s - 80s, reading about dueling Cold War spies gave me a weird nostalgic rush. “The Soviets? East Germans? Damn! We used to HATE those guys!”

In this era where decades of misdeeds by intelligence agencies are common knowledge and the notion of elaborate spy games are widely used fictional plots, it’s a little hard to imagine how groundbreaking this book was back in 1963. James Bond was in full literary swing and just beginning his cinematic career, and most people in the western nations still trusted their governments and believed that their spies were the good guys who would hold back those dirty Commies with sheer moral superiority.

It had to have been a hell of a shock to read a novel like this from a writer who had worked for British intelligence who convincingly told a story where the conflict between the two sides was a series of elaborate con games about either hiding what you knew or tricking the other guy into believing a lie. And as demonstrated here, both sides fully believed that the ends justified the means.

Alec Leamas is with the British intelligence service nicknamed the Circus and runs their operations in West Berlin. However, he’s lost every valuable agent he had to a ruthless East German operative named Mundt. Leamas is recalled by the Circus back to London where he is offered a dangerous new assignment. The Circus demotes Leamas. He pretends to become a disgruntled drunk who eventually loses his job and his pension, and he briefly gets sent to prison after assaulting someone. The ploy is to make the other side think that Leamas is ripe to turn on the Circus so that they can plant false intelligence and get back at Mundt. However, Leamas may have made a critical mistake by actually falling in love while playing a drunken disgrace.

Even with nearly 50 years worth of spy stories after this using similar plots, this book still had enough twists and turns to keep me guessing. The theme about how the supposed ‘good guys’ were just as willing to use any individual or deal with any devil to get the job done as the ‘bad guys’ were is just as relevant today as it was when it was first written. I can’t believe it took me this long to read this book.

    100 famous-books spy-vs-spy

Stephen

1,516 reviews12k followers

April 25, 2011

4.5 to 5.0 stars. Okay to begin this review I want to point out that, except for a number of Tom Clancy novels, I have only read a handful of spy thrillers so what impressed me about this book may be pretty typical stuff in the better works of the genre. Also, I have not seen the movie adaptation based and knew nothing about the plot coming in (a condition I highly recommend if you have the chance).

With that introduction made, I LOVED THIS BOOK. For a book published in 1963, once you get past some obvious anachronisms (e.g., the Berlin wall, who the bad guy are,

the sense of optimism that the world may not be totally fucked....sorry couldn't resist...), the book did not feel dated at all. I was absolutely captivated from the opening scene to the incredible ending and I highly recommend this book.

The plot deals with a British case officer working in West Berlin who, after losing his last agent operating in East Berlin, returns to London and contemplates retirement. However, his superiors have one last assignment for him and one for which his current state of mind is ideal for. They want him to “defect” and set up his nemesis in the end game of a plan that has been in the works for years. All of this takes place at the very beginning of the novel so I don’t think I am giving away any spoilers.

From here, this tightly woven, brilliantly executed plot moves at an incredibly fast pace and is filled with superb twists, amazing dialogue and great characters, all of which blur the lines between good and bad. In fact, one of the most impressive aspects of the novel is the way it portrays the world of espionage as being a world filled with “grey” people doing often immoral things but for what they consider "the greater good." This aspect of espionage work has always intrigued me and I have never come across a book that portrays this better.

Bottom-line, this was a great read that packed a very enjoyable, detailed story in its slim, svelte 224 pages. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!!

One final note: I listened to the audio version of this book read by Frank Muller (one of my favorite narrators who tragically passed away a few years ago) and thought he did a superb job and added to the enjoyment of the story.

    1954-1969 audiobook need-to-buy

Anne

457 reviews423 followers

April 12, 2021

.The Spy Who Came In from the Cold is John le Carre's first espionage novel. It is also the book that first brought him acclaim and several awards. And deservedly so. This Cold War story is set in London and East Germany in 1963. The twists and turns, the characters, the action, and the dialogue all felt very authentic. And, of course, it is brilliantly written. Fans of George Smiley will be disappointed because he is not in this novel but the other characters do him proud. He is mentioned by other characters here and there.

This is the third novel written by le Carre's novel. I started with le Carre's debut novel then moved on to his second and now the third. It has been interesting to read le Carre's at the beginning of his career and the progression from detective and murder mystery to Cold War espionage. I highly recommend these first three books for Smiley and le Carre fans.

    2011 2021 classics

Diane

1,086 reviews3,050 followers

December 22, 2017

What a marvelous spy thriller this is! I can see why it's considered such a classic.

I'm late to the John le Carré book party, but I've been enjoying my time here so far. I loved his memoir The Pigeon Tunnel, and I thought his novel Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy was brilliant. When his latest book, A Legacy of Spies, was released and got positive reviews, I decided to go back and catch up on the George Smiley series.

Smiley plays a minor role in The Spy Who Came in from the Cold, but it doesn't matter because Alec Leamas is such a compelling character. We follow Leamas as he gets involved in a tangled revenge plot against a powerful East German agent. There are a lot of twists and turns, which I won't spoil. I had seen the movie version starring Richard Burton, but I enjoyed the book more because it got deeper into the mindset of Leamas.

Highly recommended for fans of spy novels.

Favorite Quotes
"He knew then what it was that Liz had given him; the thing that he would have to go back and find if ever he got home to England; it was the caring about little things — the faith in ordinary life; the simplicity that made you break up a bit of bread into a paper bag, walk down to the beach and throw it to the gulls. It was this respect for triviality which he had never been allowed to possess; whether it was bread of the seagulls or love, whatever it was he would go back and find it."

"What do you think spies are: priests, saints, and martyrs? They’re a squalid procession of vain fools, traitors too, yes; pansies, sadists, and drunkards, people who play cowboys and Indians to brighten their rotten lives. Do you think they sit like monks in London balancing the rights and wrongs? I’d have killed Mundt if I could, I hate his guts; but not now. It so happens that they need him. They need him so that the great moronic mass that you admire can sleep soundly in their beds at night. They need him for the safety of ordinary, crummy people like you and me."

"A man who lives apart, not to others but alone, is exposed to obvious psychological dangers. In itself, the practice of deception is not particularly exacting; it is a matter of experience, of professional expertise, it is a facility most of us can acquire."

    audiobooks mysteries-thrillers

Dave Schaafsma

Author6 books31.9k followers

December 14, 2020

RIP, John le Carré, 12/13/20, at 89.

I read this in the early seventies and was expecting something like James Bond, but discovered something far richer and darker, not "just" a spy novel but a beautifully novel about the state, about British intelligence, with no heroes. In the manner of Conrad, or Graham Greene, who also wrote spy books, and said it was the best spy novel he had ever read. I read this again a few years ago in order to see the 1965 film adaptation with Richard Burton, Claire Bloom and Oskar Werner.

Scott

2,021 reviews236 followers

November 11, 2021

"What do you think spies are - priests, saints or martyrs? They're a squalid procession of vain fools, traitors too, yes; pansies, sadists and drunkards, people who play 'cowboys and Indians' to brighten their rotten lives. Do you think they sit like monks, balancing the rights and wrongs?" -- bellicose protagonist Alec Leamas, a British intelligence operative, on page 214

I've read that author le Carre had intentionally structured his spy-centered books from the early 60's in direct opposition to (or, with his extreme dislike of) 'Bondmania,' as secret agent 007 was a steady presence on international bestseller lists and making inroads in the film world. Well, after reading The Spy Who Came in From the Cold, I think I'll stick with Ian Fleming's work - other than admittedly suspenseful first and final chapters, I found this slow-moving and just too talky. I'm also not sure it translates well to a 21st century audience, given that this was first published when the Cold War was still active and very much a hot topic. (However, lots of GR friends as well as other readers have given it high ratings, so opinions will vary.) Much of the text consisted of mostly men - the handful of involved characters uniformly came off as stiff, often spouting flat or humorless dialogue - sitting in a room together, conversing about persons / events that weren't particularly explained very well, making it like the reader was listening in on two complete strangers during a chat. It was boring in many stretches (and I get it - le Carre was going for some bitter realism here), and for a story only 200+ pages in length there were chunks of time I simply had no idea what the hell was going on. I'm glad other readers liked it a lot, but I was just puzzled by the fanfare attached to this book.

Agnieszka

258 reviews1,081 followers

September 13, 2017


Le Carre’s style is quite recognizable. Economical in words, rough, laconic. Intricate plot, agents, double agents, cat-and-mouse game. Feelings of burnout, cynicism and hopelessness. Atmosphere of a constant threat and fatigue, melancholic gray London, claustrophobic East Berlin. Everything written in harsh almost impersonal prose what only deepens the feeling of coldness in human relations.

The Spy Who Came In from the Cold takes place in the time of cold war and we’re following the actions of Alec Leamas, a British agent who having lose his best spy behind the Iron Curtain returns to East Berlin with last job. Once again we meet our old friends: George Smiley, Peter Guillam and Control; though they are not playing the leading roles here. You will not find here striking chases and gunfights, do not seek here a clear distinction between good and evil, you won’t get here in the end an easy consolation. Do know that people are only pawns on History’s chessboard. Prepare yourself that sometimes there is no escape from the cold.

The Spy Who Came In from the Cold (George Smiley, #3) (36)

    1001-books 2014 john-le-carré

Susan

2,886 reviews581 followers

March 16, 2018

Alec Leamas is the Head of the West Berlin office, who is recalled back to London after losing another agent. Afraid that he is heading for a desk job, or worse, he is asked to undertake one more mission – the fake defection of a senior British agent to frame an East German operative; Hans-Dieter Mundt, who escaped in “Call of the Dead,” the first George Smiley novel.

In order to bring Leamas to East German attention, the Circus sacks him and Leamas ends up working in a run-down library, where he embarks on an affair with a young Party member, Liz Gold. What unfolds is a clever, convoluted plot, where nothing is as it seems. Slowly, the trap is set and we follow Leamas from London, back across the curtain into East Germany.

Although this is listed as one of the Smiley series, George Smiley appears only briefly in this novel. However, you are always aware of him in the background and of his relationship with Mundt, from the very first book. Leamas is an interesting character, while Liz adds the touch of innocence, in this world of espionage, which underlies the personal cost – not only to her, but to those who work in the murky work of spying.

Like all classics, this book works because you care about the characters and what happens to them. Le Carre captures perfectly a time, and a place, and inhabits that world with confidence. I look forward to continuing the series and reading all of Le Carre’s backlist.

Woman Reading (is away exploring)

467 reviews361 followers

March 13, 2021

4.5 ☆

The rich have eaten your future and your poor have given them the food.

The Spy Who Came In from the Cold is listed by GR as #3 in the George Smiley series. Since Smiley played a peripheral role, this can be read as a standalone. Indeed when this was published in 1963, it not unexpectedly catapulted le Carré into international fame.

Set in 1961 - 1962, this story's backdrop was highly politically charged. The Berlin Wall had been erected seemingly overnight in August 1961 in order to stop the outflow of people from the German Democratic Republic (GDR). Despite its name, the GDR was Communist, an extension of the U.S.S.R. and not officially recognized as a country by the Allies. During this tense standoff, both sides were trying to gather intelligence about the other side.

Alec Leamas, the main protagonist, was the Deputy-Controller of Area, ie. the British head agent runner in Berlin. The story began with Leamas waiting for his most important spy, and also the last one alive, to escape the GDR. A CIA operative kept vigil with Leamas at the West Germany checkpoint by the Wall. The Wall was laced with barbwire and guarded by armed policemen on both sides. The police were authorized to shoot to kill, but they knew that gunfire had to be confined to their respective side of the Wall in order to avoid initiating a war. Leamas' night ended badly.

He met failure as one day he would probably meet death, with cynical resentment and the courage of a solitary.

Leamas was nearing the cut-off age for field operations so he was not surprised when Control summoned him home to London, where the Secret Service was headquartered. During his debrief, Control revealed that Hans-Dieter Mundt was the likely one to blame for killing all of Leamas' spies in Germany. It isn't necessary but if you've read Call for the Dead #1, then you'll recall that Mundt was an assassin.
Mundt's appearance was fully consistent with his temperament. He looked an athlete. His young face had a hard clean line and a frightening directness; it was barren of humor or fantasy. ... Leamas found no difficulty in recalling that Mundt was a killer. There was a coldness about him, a rigorous self-sufficiency which perfectly equipped him for the business of murder.

Leamas had heard about Mundt's earlier activities in England. Freshly informed that Mundt had single-handedly dismantled Leamas' German network, Leamas hated Mundt. Control then asked Leamas whether he would undertake one last dangerous mission to topple Mundt, now a highly-placed figure in the Abteilung, the GDR intelligence system.
“We have to live without sympathy, don't we? That's impossible of course. We act it to one another, all this hardness; but we aren't like that really, I mean...one can't be out in the cold all the time; one has to come in from the cold...d'you see what I mean?

I would say that since the war, our methods - ours and those of the opposition - have become much the same. I mean you can't be less ruthless than the opposition simply because your government's 'policy' is benevolent, can you now?”


Le Carré had demonstrated through his first two books that he could write elegantly. This third novel revealed an improved mastery of storytelling. The Spy Who Came In from the Cold began dramatically and slowly built up a greater sense of dread and suspense. I began to drag my feet in the last 15 percent, not because I had lost interest, but because this tale seemed so plausible during Cold War pressures that it fueled anxiety. All I can say is that this may be 60-year-old fiction, but it deserves its top placement in the classic espionage genre and remains quite a powerful story. The ending left me a bit speechless .
“What do you think spies are: priests, saints, and martyrs? They’re a squalid procession of vain fools, traitors too, yes; pansies, sadists, and drunkards, people who play cowboys and Indians to brighten their rotten lives. Do you think they sit like monks in London balancing the rights and wrongs?”

    4-and-half-to-5-stars-stellar thriller-or-suspense
The Spy Who Came In from the Cold (George Smiley, #3) (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Recommended Articles
Article information

Author: Catherine Tremblay

Last Updated:

Views: 6445

Rating: 4.7 / 5 (47 voted)

Reviews: 94% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Catherine Tremblay

Birthday: 1999-09-23

Address: Suite 461 73643 Sherril Loaf, Dickinsonland, AZ 47941-2379

Phone: +2678139151039

Job: International Administration Supervisor

Hobby: Dowsing, Snowboarding, Rowing, Beekeeping, Calligraphy, Shooting, Air sports

Introduction: My name is Catherine Tremblay, I am a precious, perfect, tasty, enthusiastic, inexpensive, vast, kind person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.