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Over on Twitter, there is the hashtag #fridayreads, the idea behind which is, unsurprisingly, that you should tweet what you're reading on any given Friday. For the past few weeks, partly as a response to the fact that I seem to have very little time to write full-length reviews at the moment, I've been considering bringing the hashtag over here and putting up short posts about what I'm reading; and when I say 'considering', I mean 'planning to but discovering that the odds of me having a spare hour to think and write about a book on a Friday are apparently zero'. On the other hand, I tend to have at least a little free time on a Sunday: hence this post, and hopefully future posts.

This week, I'm working my way through John le Carre's Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (1974), in preparation for the soon-to-be-released film, apparently starring every notable male British actor currently working. I'm about two-thirds of the way through, and enjoying it very much, and not envying the scriptwriter who had to make something cinematic out of what is essentially a series of long, detailed conversations interspersed with flashbacks. I have actually seen the 1979 BBC TV adaptation, but it apparently made so little impression on me that I don't remember any of the major details of the plot, which has to do with rooting out a high-level mole, so I can't really comment on how the transition was managed in that case; presumably in this case, and the trailer suggests as much, they are filming at least some of the flashbacks, since if they didn't some of the big-name actors would hardly be on-screen at all.

So it has less present-tense action than the only other le Carre I've read -- The Spy Who Came In From The Cold, earlier this year -- but it shares with that novel an ability to present action without interpretation, or with only minimal interpretation (some pieces of jargon are glossed), in a way that feeds very successfully into the obsessive, furtive quality of the world le Carre is writing about. A couple of years ago I read the first volume of Javier Marias' Your Face Tomorrow, and it now seems clear that Marias must have been much influenced by le Carre's style in this sort of book, only pushing the ruminative aspects even more to the foreground. (I must go back and finish YFT; Fever and Spear really was very good indeed.) What le Carre conveys more than Marias, though, is a sort of entropic sense that the whole business of the Circus will always have diminishing returns, that it is eternally diminishing. I was very struck by the pity one of George Smiley's interviewees feels for the spies: "Poor loves. Trained to Empire, trained to rule the waves. All gone. All taken away. Bye-bye world. You're the last, George, you and Bill." There's a very particular kind of class-based nostalgia in there, and the whole novel is steeped in it, I think knowingly.



Niall Harrison is an independent critic based in Newcastle upon Tyne, UK. He is a former editor of Strange Horizons, and his writing has also appeared in The New York Review of Science FictionFoundation: The International Review of Science Fiction, The Los Angeles Review of Books and others. He has been a judge for the Arthur C. Clarke Award, and a Guest of Honor at the 2023 British National Science Fiction Convention. His collection All These Worlds: Reviews and Essays is available from Briardene Books.
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