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John le Carré

David John Moore Cornwell (19 October 1931 – 12 December 2020), better known by his pen name John le Carré (/ləˈkær/ lə-KARR-ay),[1] was a British author, best known for his espionage novels, many of which were successfully adapted for film or television. A "sophisticated, morally ambiguous writer",[2] he is considered one of the greatest novelists of the postwar era. During the 1950s and 1960s, he worked for both the Security Service (MI5) and the Secret Intelligence Service (MI6).[3] Near the end of his life, due to his strong disapproval of Brexit, he took out Irish citizenship, which was possible due to his having an Irish grandparent.

John le Carré
Le Carré in Hamburg, 2008
BornDavid John Moore Cornwell
(1931-10-19)19 October 1931
Poole, England
Died12 December 2020(2020-12-12) (aged 89)
Truro, England
Occupation
  • Novelist
  • intelligence officer
Citizenship
  • United Kingdom
  • Ireland (c. 2020)
Education
GenreSpy fiction
Notable works
Spouse
  • Alison Sharp
    (m. 1954; div. 1971)
  • Valerie Eustace
    (m. 1972)
Children4, including Nicholas
Signature
Website
Official website

Le Carré's third novel, The Spy Who Came in from the Cold (1963), became an international best-seller, was adapted as an award-winning film, and remains one of his best-known works. This success allowed him to leave MI6 to become a full-time author.[4] His novels which have been adapted for film or television include The Looking Glass War (1965), Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (1974, 2011), Smiley's People (1979), The Little Drummer Girl (1983), The Night Manager (1993), The Tailor of Panama (1996), The Constant Gardener (2001), A Most Wanted Man (2008) and Our Kind of Traitor (2010). Philip Roth said that A Perfect Spy (1986) was "the best English novel since the war".[2]

Early life and education edit

David John Moore Cornwell was born on 19 October 1931 in Poole, Dorset, England.[5][6] His father was Ronald Thomas Archibald (Ronnie) Cornwell (1905–1975),[7][8] and his mother was Olive Moore Cornwell (née Glassey, 1906–1989). His older brother, Tony (1929–2017), was an advertising executive and county cricketer (for Dorset), who later lived in the United States.[9][10] His younger half-sister was the actress Charlotte Cornwell (1949–2021), and his younger half-brother, Rupert Cornwell (1946–2017), was a former Washington bureau chief for The Independent.[11][12] Cornwell had little early memory of his mother, who had left their family home when he was five years old. His maternal uncle was Liberal MP Alec Glassey.[13] When Cornwell was 21 years old, Glassey gave him the address in Ipswich where his mother was living. Some sixteen years later, mother and son reunited at Ipswich railway station, at her written invitation, following Cornwell's initial letter of reconciliation.[14][15]

Cornwell's father had been jailed for insurance fraud and was a known associate of the Kray twins. The family was continually in debt. The father–son relationship has been described as "difficult".[14] The Guardian reported that Le Carré recalled that he had been "beaten up by his father and grew up mostly starved of affection after his mother abandoned him at the age of five".[3] Rick Pym, a scheming con man and the father of A Perfect Spy protagonist Magnus Pym, was based on Ronnie. When his father died in 1975, Cornwell paid for a memorial funeral service but did not attend, a plot point repeated in A Perfect Spy.[14]

Cornwell's schooling began at St Andrew's Preparatory School, near Pangbourne, Berkshire, and continued at Sherborne School.[16] He grew unhappy with the typically harsh English public school regime of the time and disliked his disciplinarian housemaster. He left Sherborne early to study foreign languages at the University of Bern from 1948 to 1949.[17][16] In 1950, he was called up for National Service and served in the Intelligence Corps of the British Army garrisoned in Allied-occupied Austria, working as a German language interrogator of people who had crossed the Iron Curtain to the West. In 1952, he returned to England to study at Lincoln College, Oxford, where he worked covertly for the Security Service, MI5, spying on far-left groups for information about possible Soviet agents. During his studies, he was a member of The Gridiron Club and a college dining society known as The Goblin Club.[17]

When his father was declared bankrupt in 1954, Cornwell left Oxford to teach at Millfield Preparatory School;[13] however, a year later, he returned to Oxford, and graduated in 1956 with a First-Class degree in Modern Languages with a German Literature concentration. He then taught French and German at Eton College for two years, becoming an MI5 officer in 1958.[16]

Work in security services edit

He ran agents, conducted interrogations, tapped telephone lines and effected break-ins.[18] Encouraged by Lord Clanmorris (who wrote crime novels as "John Bingham"), and while being an active MI5 officer, Cornwell began writing his first novel, Call for the Dead (1961). Cornwell identified Lord Clanmorris as one of two models for George Smiley, the spymaster of the Circus, the other being Vivian H. H. Green.[19] As a schoolboy, Cornwell first met the latter when Green was the Chaplain and Assistant Master at Sherborne School (1942–51). The friendship continued after Green's move to Lincoln College, where he tutored Cornwell.[20]

In 1960, Cornwell transferred to MI6, the foreign-intelligence service, and worked under the cover of Second Secretary at the British Embassy in Bonn. He was later transferred to Hamburg as a political consul.[16] There, he wrote the detective story A Murder of Quality (1962) and The Spy Who Came in from the Cold (1963), as "John le Carré"—a pseudonym required because Foreign Office staff were forbidden to publish under their own names.[21][22] The meaning of the pseudonym is ambiguous: he sometimes said he had seen "le Carré" on a storefront, and later said he couldn't remember an origin.[23] When translated, "le carré" means "the square".[23]

In 1964, le Carré's career as an intelligence officer came to an end as the result of the betrayal of British agents' covers to the KGB by Kim Philby, the infamous British double agent, one of the Cambridge Five.[17][24] Le Carré depicted and analysed Philby as the upper-class traitor, codenamed "Gerald" by the KGB, the mole hunted by George Smiley in Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (1974).[25][14]

Writing edit

Le Carré's first two novels, Call for the Dead (1961) and A Murder of Quality (1962), are mystery fiction. Each features a retired spy, George Smiley, investigating a death; in the first book, the apparent suicide of a suspected communist, and in the second volume, a murder at a boys' public school. Although Call for the Dead evolves into an espionage story, Smiley's motives are more personal than political.[26] Le Carré's third novel, The Spy Who Came in from the Cold (1963), became an international best-seller and remains one of his best-known works; following its publication, he left MI6 to become a full-time writer. Although le Carré had intended The Spy Who Came in from the Cold as an indictment of espionage as morally compromised, audiences widely viewed its protagonist, Alec Leamas, as a tragic hero. In response, le Carré's next book, The Looking Glass War, was a satire about an increasingly deadly espionage mission which ultimately proves pointless.[27][28]

Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, The Honourable Schoolboy and Smiley's People (the Karla trilogy) brought Smiley back as the central figure in a sprawling espionage saga depicting his efforts first to root out a mole in the Circus and then to entrap his Soviet rival and counterpart, code-named 'Karla'. The trilogy was originally meant to be a long-running series that would find Smiley dispatching agents after Karla all around the world. Smiley's People marked the last time Smiley featured as the central character in a le Carré story, although he brought the character back in The Secret Pilgrim[29] and A Legacy of Spies.[30]

A Perfect Spy (1986), which chronicles the boyhood moral education of Magnus Pym and how it leads to his becoming a spy, is the author's most autobiographical espionage novel, reflecting the boy's very close relationship with his con man father.[31] Biographer LynnDianne Beene describes the novelist's own father, Ronnie Cornwell, as "an epic con man of little education, immense charm, extravagant tastes, but no social values".[32][5] Le Carré reflected that "writing A Perfect Spy is probably what a very wise shrink would have advised".[33] He also wrote a semi-autobiographical work, The Naïve and Sentimental Lover (1971), as the story of a man's midlife existential crisis.[34]

 
Italian cover of The Russia House (1989)

With the fall of the Iron Curtain in 1989, le Carré's writing shifted to the portrayal of the new multilateral world. His first completely post-Cold War novel, The Night Manager (1993), deals with drug and arms smuggling in the world of Latin American drug lords, secretive Caribbean banking entities and corrupt Western officials.[35][36]

His final novel, Silverview, was published posthumously in 2021.

Themes edit

Most of le Carré's books are spy stories set during the Cold War (1945–91) and portray British Intelligence agents as unheroic political functionaries, aware of the moral ambiguity of their work and engaged more in psychological than physical drama.[37] While "[espionage] was the genre that earned him fame...he used it as a platform to explore larger ethical problems and the human condition". The insight he demonstrated led "many fellow authors and critics [to regard] him as one of the finest English-language novelists of the twentieth century."[38] His writing explores "human frailty—moral ambiguity, intrigue, nuance, doubt, and cowardice".[39]

The fallibility of Western democracy – and of its secret services – is a recurring theme, as are suggestions of a possible east–west moral equivalence.[37] Characters experience little of the violence typically encountered in action thrillers and have very little recourse to gadgets. Much of the conflict is internal, rather than external and visible.[37] The recurring character George Smiley, who plays a central role in five novels and appears as a supporting character in four more, was written as an "antidote" to James Bond, a character le Carré called "an international gangster" rather than a spy and who he felt should be excluded from the canon of espionage literature.[40] In contrast, he intended Smiley, who is an overweight, bespectacled bureaucrat who uses cunning and manipulation to achieve his ends, as an accurate depiction of a spy.[41]

Le Carré's "writing entered intelligence services themselves. He popularized the term 'mole'...and other language that has become intelligence vernacular on both sides of the Atlantic — 'honeytrap', 'scalphunter', 'lamplighter' to name a few."[39] However, in his first tweet as MI6's chief, Richard Moore revealed the agency's "complicated relationship with the author: He urged would-be Smileys not to apply to the service."[39]

Other writing, film cameo edit

Le Carré records a number of incidents from his period as a diplomat in his autobiographical work, The Pigeon Tunnel: Stories from My Life (2016), which include escorting six visiting German parliamentarians to a London brothel[42] and translating at a meeting between a senior German politician and Harold Macmillan.[43]

As a journalist, le Carré wrote The Unbearable Peace (1991), a nonfiction account of Brigadier Jean-Louis Jeanmaire (1911–1992), the Swiss Army officer, who spied for the Soviet Union from 1962 until 1975.[44]

Credited under his pen name, le Carré appears as an extra in the 2011 film version of Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, among the guests at the Christmas party in several flashback scenes.

Politics edit

Threats to democracy edit

In 2017, le Carré expressed concerns over the future of liberal democracy, saying: "I think of all things that were happening across Europe in the 1930s, in Spain, in Japan, obviously in Germany. To me, these are absolutely comparable signs of the rise of fascism and it's contagious, it's infectious. Fascism is up and running in Poland and Hungary. There's an encouragement about".[45] He later wrote that the end of the Cold War had left the West without a coherent ideology, in contrast to the "notion of individual freedom, of inclusiveness, of tolerance – all of that we called anti-communism" prevailing during that time.[46]

Le Carré opposed both U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin, arguing that their desire to seek or maintain their countries' superpower status caused an impulse "for oligarchy, the dismissal of the truth, the contempt, actually, for the electorate and for the democratic system".[47] Le Carré compared Trump's tendency to dismiss the media as "fake news" to the Nazi book burnings, and wrote that the United States is "heading straight down the road to institutional racism and neo-fascism".[48][49]

In le Carré's 2019 novel Agent Running in the Field, one of the novel's characters refers to Trump as "Putin's shithouse cleaner" who "does everything for little Vladi that little Vladi can't do for himself". The novel's narrator describes Boris Johnson as "a pig-ignorant foreign secretary". He says Russia is moving "backwards into her dark, delusional past", with Britain following a short way behind.[50] Le Carré later said that he believed the novel's plotline, involving the U.S. and British intelligence services colluding to subvert the European Union, to be "horribly possible".[49]

Brexit edit

Le Carré was an outspoken advocate of European integration and sharply criticised Brexit.[51] Le Carré criticised Brexit advocates such as Boris Johnson (whom he referred to as a "mob orator"), Dominic Cummings and Nigel Farage in interviews, claiming that their "task is to fire up the people with nostalgia [and] with anger". He further opined in interviews: "What really scares me about nostalgia is that it's become a political weapon. Politicians are creating a nostalgia for an England that never existed, and selling it, really, as something we could return to", adding that, with "the demise of the working class we saw also the demise of an established social order, based on the stability of ancient class structures".[49][52] On the other hand, he said that in the Labour Party "they have this Leninist element and they have this huge appetite to level society."[53]

On Brexit, le Carré did not mince his words, comparing it to the 1956 Suez crisis, which confirmed post-imperial Britain's loss of global power. "This is without doubt the greatest catastrophe and the greatest idiocy that Britain has perpetrated since the invasion of Suez", le Carré said of Brexit. "Nobody is to blame but the Brits themselves – not the Irish, not the Europeans." "The idea, to me, that at the moment we should imagine we can substitute access to the biggest trade union in the world with access to the American market is terrifying", he said.[54][55][56]

Speaking to The Guardian in 2019, he commented: "I've always believed, though ironically it's not the way I've voted, that it's compassionate conservatism that in the end could, for example, integrate the private schooling system. If you do it from the left you will seem to be acting out of resentment; do it from the right and it looks like good social organisation." Le Carré also said: "I think my own ties to England were hugely loosened over the last few years. And it's a kind of liberation, if a sad kind."[49]

US invasion of Iraq edit

In January 2003, two months prior to the invasion, The Times published le Carré's essay "The United States Has Gone Mad" criticising the buildup to the Iraq War and President George W. Bush's response to the 11 September 2001 terrorist attacks, calling it "worse than McCarthyism, worse than the Bay of Pigs and in the long term potentially more disastrous than the Vietnam War" and "beyond anything Osama bin Laden could have hoped for in his nastiest dreams".[57][58] Le Carré participated in the London protests against the Iraq War. He said the war resulted from the "politicisation of intelligence to fit the political intentions" of governments and "How Bush and his junta succeeded in deflecting America's anger from bin Laden to Saddam Hussein is one of the great public relations conjuring tricks of history".[59][60]

He was critical of Tony Blair's role in taking Britain into the Iraq War, saying: "I can't understand that Blair has an afterlife at all. It seems to me that any politician who takes his country to war under false pretences has committed the ultimate sin. I think that a war in which we refuse to accept the body count of those that we kill is also a war of which we should be ashamed."[59]

Iran edit

Le Carré was critical of Western governments' policies towards Iran. He said that Iran's actions are a response to being "encircled by nuclear powers" and by the way in which "we ousted Mosaddeq through the CIA and the Secret Service here across the way and installed the Shah and trained his ghastly secret police force in all the black arts, the SAVAK".[59]

Le Carré feuded with Salman Rushdie over The Satanic Verses, stating: "Nobody has a God-given right to insult a great religion and be published with impunity".[61]

Israel edit

In a 1998 interview with Douglas Davis, Le Carré described Israel as "the most extraordinary carnival of human variety that I have ever set eyes on, a nation in the process of re-assembling itself from the shards of its past, now Oriental, now Western, now secular, now religious, but always anxiously moralizing about itself, criticizing itself with Maoist ferocity, a nation crackling with debate, rediscovering its past while it fought for its future." He declared: "No nation on earth was more deserving of peace—or more condemned to fight for it."[62]

Personal life edit

In 1954, Cornwell married Alison Ann Veronica Sharp. They had three sons: Simon, Stephen and Timothy;[6] they divorced in 1971.[63] In 1972, Cornwell married Valerie Jane Eustace, a book editor with Hodder & Stoughton[64] who collaborated with him behind the scenes.[65] They had a son, Nicholas, who writes as Nick Harkaway.[66] Le Carré lived in St Buryan, Cornwall, for more than 40 years; he owned a mile of cliff near Land's End.[67]The house, Tregiffian Cottage, was put up for sale in 2023 for £3 million.[68] Le Carré also owned a house in Gainsborough Gardens in Hampstead in north London.[69][70]

Le Carré was so disillusioned by the 2016 Brexit vote to leave the European Union that he secured Irish citizenship. In a BBC documentary broadcast in 2021, le Carré's son Nicholas revealed that his father's disillusionment with modern Britain, and Brexit in particular, had driven him to embrace his Irish heritage and become an Irish citizen. At the time of his death, le Carré's friend, the novelist John Banville, confirmed that the writer had researched his family roots in Inchinattin, near Rosscarbery, County Cork, and that he had applied for an Irish passport, to which he was entitled having completed the process of becoming an Irish citizen and having Irish ancestry through his maternal grandmother, Olive Wolfe.[54][55][56] His neighbour and friend Philippe Sands recalled:

He became an Irishman through his maternal grandmother. And it was very, very moving, I have to say, to arrive at the place of the memorial to find an Irish flag and only an Irish flag. He had really in the last years, grown very disillusioned with what had happened to Britain and the United Kingdom.[71]

Le Carré died at Royal Cornwall Hospital, Truro, on 12 December 2020, aged 89.[72][73] An inquest completed in June 2021 concluded that le Carré died after sustaining a fall at his home.[74] His wife Valerie died on 27 February 2021, two months after her husband, at age 82.[75]

In 2023, biographer Adam Sisman in The Secret Life of John le Carré identified 11 women with whom le Carré had affairs during his second marriage.[76]

Le Carré's son Timothy died on 31 May 2022 at the age of 59, shortly after he finished editing A Private Spy, a collection of his father's letters.[77]

Selected bibliography edit

Novels edit

Archive edit

In 2010, le Carré donated his literary archive to the Bodleian Library, Oxford. The initial 85 boxes of material deposited included handwritten drafts of Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy and The Constant Gardener. The library hosted a public display of these and other items to mark World Book Day in March 2011.[80][81]

Awards and honours edit

In addition in 2008, The Times ranked le Carré 22nd on its list of the "50 greatest British writers since 1945".[100]

Citations edit

  1. ^ "Say How: I–L". Library of Congress. National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped. November 2019. from the original on 19 September 2018. Retrieved 28 May 2018.
  2. ^ a b Garner, Dwight (14 December 2020). "John le Carré, a Master of Spy Novels Where the Real Action Was Internal". The New York Times. Retrieved 26 October 2022.
  3. ^ a b Harding, Luke (2 September 2016). "John le Carré: I was beaten by my father, abandoned by my mother". The Guardian. Retrieved 26 October 2022.
  4. ^ Kerridge, Jake (14 December 2020). "How John le Carré's early miseries led to the great masterpieces". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 2 March 2021.
  5. ^ a b "Obituary: John le Carré". BBC News. 13 December 2020. from the original on 14 December 2020. Retrieved 14 December 2020.
  6. ^ a b Homberger, Eric (14 December 2020). "John le Carré obituary". The Guardian. from the original on 14 December 2020. Retrieved 14 December 2020.
  7. ^ GRO Register of Births: Dec 1905 5a 231 Poole – Ronald Thomas A. Cornwell
  8. ^ "Why John le Carré's father went to jail (and his links to Dorset)". Daily Echo [Bournemouth Echo]. 15 August 2011. Retrieved 26 October 2022.
  9. ^ Lelyveld, Joseph (16 March 1986). "Le Carré's Toughest Case". The New York Times Magazine. from the original on 28 October 2018. Retrieved 30 January 2020.
  10. ^ Gwinn, Mary Ann (25 March 1999). "Scoundrels and Sons – Author John Le Carre Digs Deep in His Own Past for the Themes of His Work". The Seattle Times. from the original on 14 December 2020. Retrieved 30 January 2020.
  11. ^ . The Independent. Archived from the original on 10 September 2014. Retrieved 2 February 2019.
  12. ^ "Espionage: The Perfect Spy Story". Time. 25 September 1989. Retrieved 14 December 2020. (subscription required)
  13. ^ a b "Scholar, linguist, story-teller, spy..." The Guardian. 17 July 1993. from the original on 9 September 2017. Retrieved 3 July 2017.
  14. ^ a b c d Brennan, Zoe (2 April 2011). "What Does John Le Carré Have to Hide?". The Daily Telegraph. from the original on 18 November 2011. Retrieved 14 December 2020.
  15. ^ Lawson, Mark (2008). "Mark Lawson Talks to John Le Carre BBC FOUR". BBC iPlayer. Retrieved 31 May 2021.
  16. ^ a b c d "Cornwell, David John Moore, (John Le Carré), (19 Oct. 1931–12 Dec. 2020), writer". WHO'S WHO & WHO WAS WHO. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.u11935. ISBN 978-0-19-954088-4. Retrieved 15 April 2021.
  17. ^ a b c Anthony, Andrew (1 November 2009). "Observer Profile: John le Carré: A Man of Great Intelligence". The Observer. from the original on 18 August 2017. Retrieved 4 March 2010.
  18. ^ Ash, Timothy Garton (15 March 1999). "The Real le Carré". The New Yorker. Vol. 75, no. 3. pp. 36–45. from the original on 14 December 2020. Retrieved 14 December 2020.
  19. ^ "The Reverend Vivian Green". The Daily Telegraph. 26 January 2005. from the original on 13 November 2012. Retrieved 4 August 2011.
  20. ^ Singh, Anita (24 February 2011). "John le Carré: The Real George Smiley Revealed". The Daily Telegraph. from the original on 22 March 2016. Retrieved 3 September 2016.
  21. ^ "John le Carré: Espionage writer dies aged 89". BBC News. 14 December 2020. from the original on 13 December 2020. Retrieved 14 December 2020.
  22. ^ Lawless, Jill (13 December 2020). "Master spy writer John le Carre dies at 89". Boston Globe. Associated Press. Retrieved 27 January 2023. His first three novels were written while he was a spy, and his employers required him to publish under a pseudonym.
  23. ^ a b Adler-Bell, Sam (13 July 2023). "The Essential John le Carré". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 4 November 2023.
  24. ^ Plimpton, George (1997). "John le Carré, The Art of Fiction No. 149". The Paris Review. 143. from the original on 15 May 2016. Retrieved 14 December 2020.
  25. ^ Morrison, Blake (11 April 1986). "Then and Now: John le Carre". Times Literary Supplement. from the original on 14 December 2020. Retrieved 4 August 2011.
  26. ^ Tayler, Christopher (25 January 2007). "Belgravia Cockney". London Review of Books. 29 (2): 13–14. from the original on 30 March 2010. Retrieved 4 March 2010.
  27. ^ Manning 2018, pp. 78, 90.
  28. ^ Duns, Jeremy (17 February 2020). "The Looking Glass War review by John le Carré—a classic for our deceitful times". The Times. p. 17. ProQuest 2359955748. Retrieved 14 December 2020.
  29. ^ Manning 2018, p. 183.
  30. ^ Manning 2018, pp. 4–5.
  31. ^ Garner, Dwight (18 April 2013). "John le Carré Has Not Mellowed With Age (Published 2013)". The New York Times. from the original on 13 December 2020. Retrieved 14 December 2020.
  32. ^ Beene 1992, p. 2.
  33. ^ Agence France-Presse. "John Le Carre Novels: A Selection". Barron's. from the original on 14 December 2020. Retrieved 14 December 2020.
  34. ^ Cobbs 1998, p. 83.
  35. ^ Petski, Denise (5 March 2015). "Olivia Colman, Tom Hollander, Elizabeth Debicki Join AMC's The Night Manager". Deadline Hollywood. from the original on 8 August 2020. Retrieved 14 December 2020.
  36. ^ "The Night Manager: le Carré's 'unexpected miracle'". The Telegraph. 19 February 2016. from the original on 29 October 2020. Retrieved 14 December 2020.
  37. ^ a b c Holcombe, Garan (2006). . British Council. Archived from the original on 4 June 2011. Retrieved 4 March 2010.
  38. ^ Barber, Tony (14 December 2020). "John le Carré, author, 1931–2020". Financial Times. Retrieved 26 October 2022.
  39. ^ a b c Walton, Calder (26 December 2020). "What Spies Really Think About John le Carré". Foreign Policy.
  40. ^ Singh, Anita (17 August 2010). "James Bond was a neo-fascist gangster, says John Le Carré". The Telegraph. from the original on 4 April 2018. Retrieved 3 April 2018.
  41. ^ Parker, James (26 October 2011). "The Anti–James Bond". The Atlantic. from the original on 29 June 2018. Retrieved 3 April 2018.
  42. ^ le Carré, John (2016). "Official visit". The Pigeon Tunnel. Stories from My Life. Viking. ISBN 978-0-241-97687-6.
  43. ^ le Carré, John (2016). "Fingers on the trigger". The Pigeon Tunnel. Stories from My Life. Penguin Books Limited. ISBN 978-0-241-97687-6. from the original on 14 December 2020. Retrieved 14 December 2020.
  44. ^ Rausing, Sigrid. "The Unbearable Peace". Granta. from the original on 27 September 2015. Retrieved 4 March 2010.
  45. ^ Brown, Mark (7 September 2017). "John le Carré on Trump: 'Something seriously bad is happening'". The Guardian. from the original on 7 September 2017. Retrieved 8 September 2017.
  46. ^ "Novelist John Le Carré Reflects On His Own 'Legacy' Of Spying". NPR. from the original on 18 September 2020. Retrieved 14 December 2020.
  47. ^ Scott, Simon (19 October 2019). "John Le Carré Fears For The Future In 'Agent Running In The Field'". NPR. from the original on 1 July 2020. Retrieved 13 December 2020.
  48. ^ "John le Carré on Trump: 'Something seriously bad is happening'". The Guardian. 7 September 2017. from the original on 6 December 2020. Retrieved 13 December 2020.
  49. ^ a b c d Banville, John; le Carré, John (11 October 2019). "'My ties to England have loosened': John le Carré on Britain, Boris and Brexit". The Guardian. from the original on 13 December 2020. Retrieved 13 December 2020.
  50. ^ Gilbert, Sophie (26 October 2019). "John le Carré's Scathing Tale of Brexit Britain". The Atlantic. Retrieved 14 December 2020.
  51. ^ Carré, John le (1 February 2020). "John le Carré on Brexit: 'It's breaking my heart'". The Guardian. from the original on 4 February 2020. Retrieved 5 February 2020.
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  53. ^ John, Banville (11 October 2019). "Interview: 'My ties to England have loosened': John le Carré on Britain, Boris and Brexit". The Guardian. Retrieved 15 July 2022.
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  55. ^ a b "John Le Carré got Irish citizenship following Brexit vote". Raidió Teilifís Éireann. 1 April 2021. Retrieved 1 April 2021.
  56. ^ a b Sands, Philippe (1 April 2021). "Why my friend John le Carré, chronicler of the English, died an Irish citizen". The Times. Retrieved 1 April 2021.
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  65. ^ Cornwell N (13 March 2021). "My father was famous as John le Carré. My mother was his crucial, covert collaborator". The Guardian. from the original on 13 March 2021. ...Richard Ovenden, who examined the papers [le Carré] loaned to the Bodleian Library in Oxford... observed a "deep process of collaboration". His analysis is a perfect match for my recollection: "A rhythm of working together that was incredibly efficient … a kind of cadence from manuscript, to typescript, to annotated and amended typescripts … with scissors and staplers being brought to bear … getting closer and closer to the final published version."
  66. ^ Herbert, Ian (6 June 2007). "Written in his stars: son of Le Carré gets £300,000 for first novel". The Independent. ProQuest 311318983.
  67. ^ Gibbs, Geoffrey (24 July 1999). "Spy writer fights for clifftop paradise". The Guardian. Retrieved 16 October 2022.
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  69. ^ Hunter Davies (15 January 2021). "John Le Carré was my friend, or so I thought". The Times. Retrieved 21 June 2021.
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Sources edit

Further reading edit

External links edit

john, carré, david, john, moore, cornwell, october, 1931, december, 2020, better, known, name, karr, british, author, best, known, espionage, novels, many, which, were, successfully, adapted, film, television, sophisticated, morally, ambiguous, writer, conside. David John Moore Cornwell 19 October 1931 12 December 2020 better known by his pen name John le Carre l e ˈ k aer eɪ le KARR ay 1 was a British author best known for his espionage novels many of which were successfully adapted for film or television A sophisticated morally ambiguous writer 2 he is considered one of the greatest novelists of the postwar era During the 1950s and 1960s he worked for both the Security Service MI5 and the Secret Intelligence Service MI6 3 Near the end of his life due to his strong disapproval of Brexit he took out Irish citizenship which was possible due to his having an Irish grandparent John le CarreLe Carre in Hamburg 2008BornDavid John Moore Cornwell 1931 10 19 19 October 1931Poole EnglandDied12 December 2020 2020 12 12 aged 89 Truro EnglandOccupationNovelistintelligence officerCitizenshipUnited KingdomIreland c 2020 EducationUniversity of BernLincoln College Oxford BA GenreSpy fictionNotable worksThe Spy Who Came in from the ColdTinker Tailor Soldier SpyThe Honourable SchoolboySmiley s PeopleThe Little Drummer GirlA Perfect SpyThe Night ManagerThe Tailor of PanamaThe Constant GardenerSpouseAlison Sharp m 1954 div 1971 wbr Valerie Eustace m 1972 wbr Children4 including NicholasSignatureWebsiteOfficial website Le Carre s third novel The Spy Who Came in from the Cold 1963 became an international best seller was adapted as an award winning film and remains one of his best known works This success allowed him to leave MI6 to become a full time author 4 His novels which have been adapted for film or television include The Looking Glass War 1965 Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy 1974 2011 Smiley s People 1979 The Little Drummer Girl 1983 The Night Manager 1993 The Tailor of Panama 1996 The Constant Gardener 2001 A Most Wanted Man 2008 and Our Kind of Traitor 2010 Philip Roth said that A Perfect Spy 1986 was the best English novel since the war 2 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Work in security services 3 Writing 3 1 Themes 3 2 Other writing film cameo 4 Politics 4 1 Threats to democracy 4 2 Brexit 4 3 US invasion of Iraq 4 4 Iran 4 5 Israel 5 Personal life 6 Selected bibliography 6 1 Novels 7 Archive 8 Awards and honours 9 Citations 9 1 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksEarly life and education editDavid John Moore Cornwell was born on 19 October 1931 in Poole Dorset England 5 6 His father was Ronald Thomas Archibald Ronnie Cornwell 1905 1975 7 8 and his mother was Olive Moore Cornwell nee Glassey 1906 1989 His older brother Tony 1929 2017 was an advertising executive and county cricketer for Dorset who later lived in the United States 9 10 His younger half sister was the actress Charlotte Cornwell 1949 2021 and his younger half brother Rupert Cornwell 1946 2017 was a former Washington bureau chief for The Independent 11 12 Cornwell had little early memory of his mother who had left their family home when he was five years old His maternal uncle was Liberal MP Alec Glassey 13 When Cornwell was 21 years old Glassey gave him the address in Ipswich where his mother was living Some sixteen years later mother and son reunited at Ipswich railway station at her written invitation following Cornwell s initial letter of reconciliation 14 15 Cornwell s father had been jailed for insurance fraud and was a known associate of the Kray twins The family was continually in debt The father son relationship has been described as difficult 14 The Guardian reported that Le Carre recalled that he had been beaten up by his father and grew up mostly starved of affection after his mother abandoned him at the age of five 3 Rick Pym a scheming con man and the father of A Perfect Spy protagonist Magnus Pym was based on Ronnie When his father died in 1975 Cornwell paid for a memorial funeral service but did not attend a plot point repeated in A Perfect Spy 14 Cornwell s schooling began at St Andrew s Preparatory School near Pangbourne Berkshire and continued at Sherborne School 16 He grew unhappy with the typically harsh English public school regime of the time and disliked his disciplinarian housemaster He left Sherborne early to study foreign languages at the University of Bern from 1948 to 1949 17 16 In 1950 he was called up for National Service and served in the Intelligence Corps of the British Army garrisoned in Allied occupied Austria working as a German language interrogator of people who had crossed the Iron Curtain to the West In 1952 he returned to England to study at Lincoln College Oxford where he worked covertly for the Security Service MI5 spying on far left groups for information about possible Soviet agents During his studies he was a member of The Gridiron Club and a college dining society known as The Goblin Club 17 When his father was declared bankrupt in 1954 Cornwell left Oxford to teach at Millfield Preparatory School 13 however a year later he returned to Oxford and graduated in 1956 with a First Class degree in Modern Languages with a German Literature concentration He then taught French and German at Eton College for two years becoming an MI5 officer in 1958 16 Work in security services editHe ran agents conducted interrogations tapped telephone lines and effected break ins 18 Encouraged by Lord Clanmorris who wrote crime novels as John Bingham and while being an active MI5 officer Cornwell began writing his first novel Call for the Dead 1961 Cornwell identified Lord Clanmorris as one of two models for George Smiley the spymaster of the Circus the other being Vivian H H Green 19 As a schoolboy Cornwell first met the latter when Green was the Chaplain and Assistant Master at Sherborne School 1942 51 The friendship continued after Green s move to Lincoln College where he tutored Cornwell 20 In 1960 Cornwell transferred to MI6 the foreign intelligence service and worked under the cover of Second Secretary at the British Embassy in Bonn He was later transferred to Hamburg as a political consul 16 There he wrote the detective story A Murder of Quality 1962 and The Spy Who Came in from the Cold 1963 as John le Carre a pseudonym required because Foreign Office staff were forbidden to publish under their own names 21 22 The meaning of the pseudonym is ambiguous he sometimes said he had seen le Carre on a storefront and later said he couldn t remember an origin 23 When translated le carre means the square 23 In 1964 le Carre s career as an intelligence officer came to an end as the result of the betrayal of British agents covers to the KGB by Kim Philby the infamous British double agent one of the Cambridge Five 17 24 Le Carre depicted and analysed Philby as the upper class traitor codenamed Gerald by the KGB the mole hunted by George Smiley in Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy 1974 25 14 Writing editLe Carre s first two novels Call for the Dead 1961 and A Murder of Quality 1962 are mystery fiction Each features a retired spy George Smiley investigating a death in the first book the apparent suicide of a suspected communist and in the second volume a murder at a boys public school Although Call for the Dead evolves into an espionage story Smiley s motives are more personal than political 26 Le Carre s third novel The Spy Who Came in from the Cold 1963 became an international best seller and remains one of his best known works following its publication he left MI6 to become a full time writer Although le Carre had intended The Spy Who Came in from the Cold as an indictment of espionage as morally compromised audiences widely viewed its protagonist Alec Leamas as a tragic hero In response le Carre s next book The Looking Glass War was a satire about an increasingly deadly espionage mission which ultimately proves pointless 27 28 Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy The Honourable Schoolboy and Smiley s People the Karla trilogy brought Smiley back as the central figure in a sprawling espionage saga depicting his efforts first to root out a mole in the Circus and then to entrap his Soviet rival and counterpart code named Karla The trilogy was originally meant to be a long running series that would find Smiley dispatching agents after Karla all around the world Smiley s People marked the last time Smiley featured as the central character in a le Carre story although he brought the character back in The Secret Pilgrim 29 and A Legacy of Spies 30 A Perfect Spy 1986 which chronicles the boyhood moral education of Magnus Pym and how it leads to his becoming a spy is the author s most autobiographical espionage novel reflecting the boy s very close relationship with his con man father 31 Biographer LynnDianne Beene describes the novelist s own father Ronnie Cornwell as an epic con man of little education immense charm extravagant tastes but no social values 32 5 Le Carre reflected that writing A Perfect Spy is probably what a very wise shrink would have advised 33 He also wrote a semi autobiographical work The Naive and Sentimental Lover 1971 as the story of a man s midlife existential crisis 34 nbsp Italian cover of The Russia House 1989 With the fall of the Iron Curtain in 1989 le Carre s writing shifted to the portrayal of the new multilateral world His first completely post Cold War novel The Night Manager 1993 deals with drug and arms smuggling in the world of Latin American drug lords secretive Caribbean banking entities and corrupt Western officials 35 36 His final novel Silverview was published posthumously in 2021 Themes edit Most of le Carre s books are spy stories set during the Cold War 1945 91 and portray British Intelligence agents as unheroic political functionaries aware of the moral ambiguity of their work and engaged more in psychological than physical drama 37 While espionage was the genre that earned him fame he used it as a platform to explore larger ethical problems and the human condition The insight he demonstrated led many fellow authors and critics to regard him as one of the finest English language novelists of the twentieth century 38 His writing explores human frailty moral ambiguity intrigue nuance doubt and cowardice 39 The fallibility of Western democracy and of its secret services is a recurring theme as are suggestions of a possible east west moral equivalence 37 Characters experience little of the violence typically encountered in action thrillers and have very little recourse to gadgets Much of the conflict is internal rather than external and visible 37 The recurring character George Smiley who plays a central role in five novels and appears as a supporting character in four more was written as an antidote to James Bond a character le Carre called an international gangster rather than a spy and who he felt should be excluded from the canon of espionage literature 40 In contrast he intended Smiley who is an overweight bespectacled bureaucrat who uses cunning and manipulation to achieve his ends as an accurate depiction of a spy 41 Le Carre s writing entered intelligence services themselves He popularized the term mole and other language that has become intelligence vernacular on both sides of the Atlantic honeytrap scalphunter lamplighter to name a few 39 However in his first tweet as MI6 s chief Richard Moore revealed the agency s complicated relationship with the author He urged would be Smileys not to apply to the service 39 Other writing film cameo edit Le Carre records a number of incidents from his period as a diplomat in his autobiographical work The Pigeon Tunnel Stories from My Life 2016 which include escorting six visiting German parliamentarians to a London brothel 42 and translating at a meeting between a senior German politician and Harold Macmillan 43 As a journalist le Carre wrote The Unbearable Peace 1991 a nonfiction account of Brigadier Jean Louis Jeanmaire 1911 1992 the Swiss Army officer who spied for the Soviet Union from 1962 until 1975 44 Credited under his pen name le Carre appears as an extra in the 2011 film version of Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy among the guests at the Christmas party in several flashback scenes Politics editThreats to democracy edit In 2017 le Carre expressed concerns over the future of liberal democracy saying I think of all things that were happening across Europe in the 1930s in Spain in Japan obviously in Germany To me these are absolutely comparable signs of the rise of fascism and it s contagious it s infectious Fascism is up and running in Poland and Hungary There s an encouragement about 45 He later wrote that the end of the Cold War had left the West without a coherent ideology in contrast to the notion of individual freedom of inclusiveness of tolerance all of that we called anti communism prevailing during that time 46 Le Carre opposed both U S President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin arguing that their desire to seek or maintain their countries superpower status caused an impulse for oligarchy the dismissal of the truth the contempt actually for the electorate and for the democratic system 47 Le Carre compared Trump s tendency to dismiss the media as fake news to the Nazi book burnings and wrote that the United States is heading straight down the road to institutional racism and neo fascism 48 49 In le Carre s 2019 novel Agent Running in the Field one of the novel s characters refers to Trump as Putin s shithouse cleaner who does everything for little Vladi that little Vladi can t do for himself The novel s narrator describes Boris Johnson as a pig ignorant foreign secretary He says Russia is moving backwards into her dark delusional past with Britain following a short way behind 50 Le Carre later said that he believed the novel s plotline involving the U S and British intelligence services colluding to subvert the European Union to be horribly possible 49 Brexit edit Le Carre was an outspoken advocate of European integration and sharply criticised Brexit 51 Le Carre criticised Brexit advocates such as Boris Johnson whom he referred to as a mob orator Dominic Cummings and Nigel Farage in interviews claiming that their task is to fire up the people with nostalgia and with anger He further opined in interviews What really scares me about nostalgia is that it s become a political weapon Politicians are creating a nostalgia for an England that never existed and selling it really as something we could return to adding that with the demise of the working class we saw also the demise of an established social order based on the stability of ancient class structures 49 52 On the other hand he said that in the Labour Party they have this Leninist element and they have this huge appetite to level society 53 On Brexit le Carre did not mince his words comparing it to the 1956 Suez crisis which confirmed post imperial Britain s loss of global power This is without doubt the greatest catastrophe and the greatest idiocy that Britain has perpetrated since the invasion of Suez le Carre said of Brexit Nobody is to blame but the Brits themselves not the Irish not the Europeans The idea to me that at the moment we should imagine we can substitute access to the biggest trade union in the world with access to the American market is terrifying he said 54 55 56 Speaking to The Guardian in 2019 he commented I ve always believed though ironically it s not the way I ve voted that it s compassionate conservatism that in the end could for example integrate the private schooling system If you do it from the left you will seem to be acting out of resentment do it from the right and it looks like good social organisation Le Carre also said I think my own ties to England were hugely loosened over the last few years And it s a kind of liberation if a sad kind 49 US invasion of Iraq edit In January 2003 two months prior to the invasion The Times published le Carre s essay The United States Has Gone Mad criticising the buildup to the Iraq War and President George W Bush s response to the 11 September 2001 terrorist attacks calling it worse than McCarthyism worse than the Bay of Pigs and in the long term potentially more disastrous than the Vietnam War and beyond anything Osama bin Laden could have hoped for in his nastiest dreams 57 58 Le Carre participated in the London protests against the Iraq War He said the war resulted from the politicisation of intelligence to fit the political intentions of governments and How Bush and his junta succeeded in deflecting America s anger from bin Laden to Saddam Hussein is one of the great public relations conjuring tricks of history 59 60 He was critical of Tony Blair s role in taking Britain into the Iraq War saying I can t understand that Blair has an afterlife at all It seems to me that any politician who takes his country to war under false pretences has committed the ultimate sin I think that a war in which we refuse to accept the body count of those that we kill is also a war of which we should be ashamed 59 Iran edit Le Carre was critical of Western governments policies towards Iran He said that Iran s actions are a response to being encircled by nuclear powers and by the way in which we ousted Mosaddeq through the CIA and the Secret Service here across the way and installed the Shah and trained his ghastly secret police force in all the black arts the SAVAK 59 Le Carre feuded with Salman Rushdie over The Satanic Verses stating Nobody has a God given right to insult a great religion and be published with impunity 61 Israel edit In a 1998 interview with Douglas Davis Le Carre described Israel as the most extraordinary carnival of human variety that I have ever set eyes on a nation in the process of re assembling itself from the shards of its past now Oriental now Western now secular now religious but always anxiously moralizing about itself criticizing itself with Maoist ferocity a nation crackling with debate rediscovering its past while it fought for its future He declared No nation on earth was more deserving of peace or more condemned to fight for it 62 Personal life editIn 1954 Cornwell married Alison Ann Veronica Sharp They had three sons Simon Stephen and Timothy 6 they divorced in 1971 63 In 1972 Cornwell married Valerie Jane Eustace a book editor with Hodder amp Stoughton 64 who collaborated with him behind the scenes 65 They had a son Nicholas who writes as Nick Harkaway 66 Le Carre lived in St Buryan Cornwall for more than 40 years he owned a mile of cliff near Land s End 67 The house Tregiffian Cottage was put up for sale in 2023 for 3 million 68 Le Carre also owned a house in Gainsborough Gardens in Hampstead in north London 69 70 Le Carre was so disillusioned by the 2016 Brexit vote to leave the European Union that he secured Irish citizenship In a BBC documentary broadcast in 2021 le Carre s son Nicholas revealed that his father s disillusionment with modern Britain and Brexit in particular had driven him to embrace his Irish heritage and become an Irish citizen At the time of his death le Carre s friend the novelist John Banville confirmed that the writer had researched his family roots in Inchinattin near Rosscarbery County Cork and that he had applied for an Irish passport to which he was entitled having completed the process of becoming an Irish citizen and having Irish ancestry through his maternal grandmother Olive Wolfe 54 55 56 His neighbour and friend Philippe Sands recalled He became an Irishman through his maternal grandmother And it was very very moving I have to say to arrive at the place of the memorial to find an Irish flag and only an Irish flag He had really in the last years grown very disillusioned with what had happened to Britain and the United Kingdom 71 Le Carre died at Royal Cornwall Hospital Truro on 12 December 2020 aged 89 72 73 An inquest completed in June 2021 concluded that le Carre died after sustaining a fall at his home 74 His wife Valerie died on 27 February 2021 two months after her husband at age 82 75 In 2023 biographer Adam Sisman in The Secret Life of John le Carre identified 11 women with whom le Carre had affairs during his second marriage 76 Le Carre s son Timothy died on 31 May 2022 at the age of 59 shortly after he finished editing A Private Spy a collection of his father s letters 77 Selected bibliography editMain article John le Carre bibliography Novels edit Call for the Dead 1961 OCLC 751303381 A Murder of Quality 1962 OCLC 777015390 The Spy Who Came in from the Cold 1963 OCLC 561198531 The Looking Glass War 1965 OCLC 752987890 A Small Town in Germany 1968 ISBN 0 143 12260 6 The Naive and Sentimental Lover 1971 ISBN 0 143 11975 3 Smiley Versus Karla trilogy Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy 1974 ISBN 0 143 12093 X The Honourable Schoolboy 1977 ISBN 0 143 11973 7 Smiley s People 1979 ISBN 0 340 99439 8 The Little Drummer Girl 1983 ISBN 0 143 11974 5 A Perfect Spy 1986 ISBN 0 143 11976 1 The Russia House 1989 ISBN 0 743 46466 4 The Secret Pilgrim 1990 ISBN 0 345 50442 9 The Night Manager 1993 ISBN 0 345 38576 4 Our Game 1995 ISBN 0 345 40000 3 The Tailor of Panama 1996 ISBN 0 345 42043 8 Single amp Single 1999 ISBN 0 743 45806 0 The Constant Gardener 2001 ISBN 0 743 28720 7 Absolute Friends 2003 ISBN 0 670 04489 X The Mission Song 2006 ISBN 0 340 92199 4 A Most Wanted Man 2008 ISBN 1 416 59609 7 Our Kind of Traitor 2010 ISBN 0 143 11972 9 A Delicate Truth 2013 ISBN 0 143 12531 1 A Legacy of Spies 2017 ISBN 978 0 735 22511 4 78 Agent Running in the Field 2019 ISBN 1984878875 Silverview 2021 ISBN 9780241550069 79 Archive editIn 2010 le Carre donated his literary archive to the Bodleian Library Oxford The initial 85 boxes of material deposited included handwritten drafts of Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy and The Constant Gardener The library hosted a public display of these and other items to mark World Book Day in March 2011 80 81 Awards and honours edit1963 British Crime Writers Association Gold Dagger for The Spy Who Came in from the Cold 82 1964 Somerset Maugham Award for The Spy Who Came in from the Cold 83 1965 Mystery Writers of America Edgar Award for The Spy Who Came in from the Cold 84 1977 British Crime Writers Association Gold Dagger for The Honourable Schoolboy 82 1977 James Tait Black Memorial Prize Fiction Award for The Honourable Schoolboy 85 1983 Japan Adventure Fiction Association Prize for The Little Drummer Girl 86 1984 Honorary Fellow Lincoln College Oxford 63 1984 Mystery Writers of America Edgar Grand Master 84 1988 Crime Writers Association Diamond Dagger Lifetime Achievement Award 87 1988 The Malaparte Prize Italy 63 1990 Honorary degree University of Exeter 88 1990 Helmerich Award of the Tulsa Library Trust 89 1996 Honorary degree University of St Andrews 90 1997 Honorary degree University of Southampton 91 1998 Honorary degree University of Bath 92 2005 Crime Writers Association Dagger of Daggers for The Spy Who Came in from the Cold 93 2005 Commander of the Order of Arts and Letters France 63 2008 honorary doctorate University of Bern 94 2011 Goethe Medal awarded by the Goethe Institute 95 96 2012 Honorary degree of Doctor of Letters University of Oxford 97 2020 Olof Palme Prize 98 le Carre donated the US 100 000 prize money to Medecins Sans Frontieres 99 In addition in 2008 The Times ranked le Carre 22nd on its list of the 50 greatest British writers since 1945 100 Citations edit Say How I L Library of Congress National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped November 2019 Archived from the original on 19 September 2018 Retrieved 28 May 2018 a b Garner Dwight 14 December 2020 John le Carre a Master of Spy Novels Where the Real Action Was Internal The New York Times Retrieved 26 October 2022 a b Harding Luke 2 September 2016 John le Carre I was beaten by my father abandoned by my mother The Guardian Retrieved 26 October 2022 Kerridge Jake 14 December 2020 How John le Carre s early miseries led to the great masterpieces The Telegraph Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 2 March 2021 a b Obituary John le Carre BBC News 13 December 2020 Archived from the original on 14 December 2020 Retrieved 14 December 2020 a b Homberger Eric 14 December 2020 John le Carre obituary The Guardian Archived from the original on 14 December 2020 Retrieved 14 December 2020 GRO Register of Births Dec 1905 5a 231 Poole Ronald Thomas A Cornwell Why John le Carre s father went to jail and his links to Dorset Daily Echo Bournemouth Echo 15 August 2011 Retrieved 26 October 2022 Lelyveld Joseph 16 March 1986 Le Carre s Toughest Case The New York Times Magazine Archived from the original on 28 October 2018 Retrieved 30 January 2020 Gwinn Mary Ann 25 March 1999 Scoundrels and Sons Author John Le Carre Digs Deep in His Own Past for the Themes of His Work The Seattle Times Archived from the original on 14 December 2020 Retrieved 30 January 2020 Rupert Cornwell The Independent Archived from the original on 10 September 2014 Retrieved 2 February 2019 Espionage The Perfect Spy Story Time 25 September 1989 Retrieved 14 December 2020 subscription required a b Scholar linguist story teller spy The Guardian 17 July 1993 Archived from the original on 9 September 2017 Retrieved 3 July 2017 a b c d Brennan Zoe 2 April 2011 What Does John Le Carre Have to Hide The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 18 November 2011 Retrieved 14 December 2020 Lawson Mark 2008 Mark Lawson Talks to John Le Carre BBC FOUR BBC iPlayer Retrieved 31 May 2021 a b c d Cornwell David John Moore John Le Carre 19 Oct 1931 12 Dec 2020 writer WHO S WHO amp WHO WAS WHO doi 10 1093 ww 9780199540884 013 u11935 ISBN 978 0 19 954088 4 Retrieved 15 April 2021 a b c Anthony Andrew 1 November 2009 Observer Profile John le Carre A Man of Great Intelligence The Observer Archived from the original on 18 August 2017 Retrieved 4 March 2010 Ash Timothy Garton 15 March 1999 The Real le Carre The New Yorker Vol 75 no 3 pp 36 45 Archived from the original on 14 December 2020 Retrieved 14 December 2020 The Reverend Vivian Green The Daily Telegraph 26 January 2005 Archived from the original on 13 November 2012 Retrieved 4 August 2011 Singh Anita 24 February 2011 John le Carre The Real George Smiley Revealed The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 22 March 2016 Retrieved 3 September 2016 John le Carre Espionage writer dies aged 89 BBC News 14 December 2020 Archived from the original on 13 December 2020 Retrieved 14 December 2020 Lawless Jill 13 December 2020 Master spy writer John le Carre dies at 89 Boston Globe Associated Press Retrieved 27 January 2023 His first three novels were written while he was a spy and his employers required him to publish under a pseudonym a b Adler Bell Sam 13 July 2023 The Essential John le Carre The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 4 November 2023 Plimpton George 1997 John le Carre The Art of Fiction No 149 The Paris Review 143 Archived from the original on 15 May 2016 Retrieved 14 December 2020 Morrison Blake 11 April 1986 Then and Now John le Carre Times Literary Supplement Archived from the original on 14 December 2020 Retrieved 4 August 2011 Tayler Christopher 25 January 2007 Belgravia Cockney London Review of Books 29 2 13 14 Archived from the original on 30 March 2010 Retrieved 4 March 2010 Manning 2018 pp 78 90 Duns Jeremy 17 February 2020 The Looking Glass War review by John le Carre a classic for our deceitful times The Times p 17 ProQuest 2359955748 Retrieved 14 December 2020 Manning 2018 p 183 Manning 2018 pp 4 5 Garner Dwight 18 April 2013 John le Carre Has Not Mellowed With Age Published 2013 The New York Times Archived from the original on 13 December 2020 Retrieved 14 December 2020 Beene 1992 p 2 Agence France Presse John Le Carre Novels A Selection Barron s Archived from the original on 14 December 2020 Retrieved 14 December 2020 Cobbs 1998 p 83 Petski Denise 5 March 2015 Olivia Colman Tom Hollander Elizabeth Debicki Join AMC s The Night Manager Deadline Hollywood Archived from the original on 8 August 2020 Retrieved 14 December 2020 The Night Manager le Carre s unexpected miracle The Telegraph 19 February 2016 Archived from the original on 29 October 2020 Retrieved 14 December 2020 a b c Holcombe Garan 2006 Contemporary Writers British Council Archived from the original on 4 June 2011 Retrieved 4 March 2010 Barber Tony 14 December 2020 John le Carre author 1931 2020 Financial Times Retrieved 26 October 2022 a b c Walton Calder 26 December 2020 What Spies Really Think About John le Carre Foreign Policy Singh Anita 17 August 2010 James Bond was a neo fascist gangster says John Le Carre The Telegraph Archived from the original on 4 April 2018 Retrieved 3 April 2018 Parker James 26 October 2011 The Anti James Bond The Atlantic Archived from the original on 29 June 2018 Retrieved 3 April 2018 le Carre John 2016 Official visit The Pigeon Tunnel Stories from My Life Viking ISBN 978 0 241 97687 6 le Carre John 2016 Fingers on the trigger The Pigeon Tunnel Stories from My Life Penguin Books Limited ISBN 978 0 241 97687 6 Archived from the original on 14 December 2020 Retrieved 14 December 2020 Rausing Sigrid The Unbearable Peace Granta Archived from the original on 27 September 2015 Retrieved 4 March 2010 Brown Mark 7 September 2017 John le Carre on Trump Something seriously bad is happening The Guardian Archived from the original on 7 September 2017 Retrieved 8 September 2017 Novelist John Le Carre Reflects On His Own Legacy Of Spying NPR Archived from the original on 18 September 2020 Retrieved 14 December 2020 Scott Simon 19 October 2019 John Le Carre Fears For The Future In Agent Running In The Field NPR Archived from the original on 1 July 2020 Retrieved 13 December 2020 John le Carre on Trump Something seriously bad is happening The Guardian 7 September 2017 Archived from the original on 6 December 2020 Retrieved 13 December 2020 a b c d Banville John le Carre John 11 October 2019 My ties to England have loosened John le Carre on Britain Boris and Brexit The Guardian Archived from the original on 13 December 2020 Retrieved 13 December 2020 Gilbert Sophie 26 October 2019 John le Carre s Scathing Tale of Brexit Britain The Atlantic Retrieved 14 December 2020 Carre John le 1 February 2020 John le Carre on Brexit It s breaking my heart The Guardian Archived from the original on 4 February 2020 Retrieved 5 February 2020 John le Carre Politicians love chaos it gives them authority BBC News 14 October 2019 Archived from the original on 19 November 2020 Retrieved 13 December 2020 John Banville 11 October 2019 Interview My ties to England have loosened John le Carre on Britain Boris and Brexit The Guardian Retrieved 15 July 2022 a b O Toole Fintan 1 April 2021 John le Carre died an Irishman after gaining citizenship son says The Irish Times Retrieved 1 April 2021 a b John Le Carre got Irish citizenship following Brexit vote Raidio Teilifis Eireann 1 April 2021 Retrieved 1 April 2021 a b Sands Philippe 1 April 2021 Why my friend John le Carre chronicler of the English died an Irish citizen The Times Retrieved 1 April 2021 Meier Andrew January 2017 Coming in from the Cold Bookforum Retrieved 15 December 2020 le Carre John 15 January 2003 Opinion The United States of America has gone mad The Sunday Times Archived from the original on 4 December 2010 Retrieved 8 February 2011 a b c Exclusive British Novelist John le Carre on the Iraq War Corporate Power the Exploitation of Africa and His New Novel Our Kind of Traitor Democracy Now 11 October 2010 Retrieved 17 December 2020 John le Carre Iraq War Critic and Legendary Author of Spy Novels Dies at 89 Democracy Now 14 December 2020 Retrieved 17 December 2020 The spy who came in from the cold The Economist 30 October 2015 Archived from the original on 30 October 2015 Retrieved 30 October 2015 Le Carre Extraordinary Israel crackling with debate rocked me to my boots The Times of Israel 14 December 2020 Retrieved 11 May 2021 a b c d Sefton Daniel ed 2007 Debrett s People of Today Debrett s p 973 ISBN 978 1 870520 95 9 OCLC 764415351 Walker Tim 5 June 2009 Eden Richard ed Le Carre pays tribute to his first love The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Cornwell N 13 March 2021 My father was famous as John le Carre My mother was his crucial covert collaborator The Guardian Archived from the original on 13 March 2021 Richard Ovenden who examined the papers le Carre loaned to the Bodleian Library in Oxford observed a deep process of collaboration His analysis is a perfect match for my recollection A rhythm of working together that was incredibly efficient a kind of cadence from manuscript to typescript to annotated and amended typescripts with scissors and staplers being brought to bear getting closer and closer to the final published version Herbert Ian 6 June 2007 Written in his stars son of Le Carre gets 300 000 for first novel The Independent ProQuest 311318983 Gibbs Geoffrey 24 July 1999 Spy writer fights for clifftop paradise The Guardian Retrieved 16 October 2022 Vergnault Olivier 16 September 2023 House of world famous spy novelist John le Carre is up for sale Cornwall Live Retrieved 22 September 2023 Hunter Davies 15 January 2021 John Le Carre was my friend or so I thought The Times Retrieved 21 June 2021 Gerald Isaaman 29 September 2017 Smiley s back with a heady cocktail Camden New Journal Retrieved 21 June 2021 Bremner Rory Hiding in Plain Site The Spying Game Retrieved 26 October 2022 Lea Richard Cain Sian 13 December 2020 John le Carre author of Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy dies aged 89 The Guardian Archived from the original on 13 December 2020 Retrieved 13 December 2020 John le Carre Cold War novelist dies aged 89 BBC News 13 December 2020 Archived from the original on 13 December 2020 Retrieved 13 December 2020 World famous author John le Carre died after falling at his home in Cornwall Cornwall Live 15 June 2021 Retrieved 15 June 2021 Saunders E Becquart C 7 March 2021 John le Carre s wife Valerie Jane has died Cornwall Live Archived from the original on 7 March 2021 Fesperman Dan 23 October 2023 How John le Carre s serial adultery shaped his spy novels Washington Post Retrieved 23 October 2023 Paul Linford 9 June 2022 Son of famous novelist who became arts journalist dies aged 59 holdthefrontpage co uk Retrieved 31 October 2022 Kean Danuta 7 March 2017 George Smiley to return in new John le Carre novel A Legacy of Spies The Guardian Archived from the original on 8 March 2017 Retrieved 8 March 2017 Harris Elizabeth A 19 May 2021 John le Carre Fans Are Getting One More Novel The New York Times Archived from the original on 19 May 2021 Sellgren Katherine 24 February 2011 John le Carre donates archive to Bodleian Library BBC News Archived from the original on 8 October 2014 Retrieved 13 May 2013 Higgins Charlotte 23 February 2011 John le Carre gives his literary archive to Oxford s Bodleian Library The Guardian Archived from the original on 4 December 2013 Retrieved 13 May 2013 a b The CWA Gold Dagger Crime Writers Association 5 July 2012 Archived from the original on 14 January 2012 Retrieved 8 January 2013 Society of Authors Awards Society of Authors 8 May 2020 Archived from the original on 1 October 2020 Retrieved 13 December 2020 a b The Edgar Database Mystery Writers of America Archived from the original on 28 August 2012 Retrieved 10 March 2013 Fiction winners University of Edinburgh Archived from the original on 4 November 2020 Retrieved 14 December 2020 日本冒険小説協会大賞リスト Japan Adventure Fiction Association Grand Prize List jade dti ne jp in Japanese Archived from the original on 28 May 2017 Retrieved 14 December 2020 The Cartier Diamond Dagger Crime Writers Association 5 July 2012 Archived from the original on 3 December 2012 Retrieved 7 January 2013 Previous honorary graduates University of Exeter Archived from the original on 21 February 2013 Retrieved 6 March 2013 Peggy V Helmerich Distinguished Author Award Tulsa Library Trust 1990 Archived from the original on 24 February 2012 Retrieved 11 February 2012 Honorary Graduates St Andrews University Archived from the original on 13 April 2016 Retrieved 6 March 2013 Honorary Graduates of Earlier Years University of Southampton Archived from the original on 7 December 2013 Retrieved 6 March 2013 Honorary Graduates 1989 to Present bath ac uk University of Bath Archived from the original on 19 December 2015 Retrieved 18 February 2012 John le Carre Wins the Dagger of Daggers Crime Writers Association Archived from the original on 2 May 2013 Retrieved 6 March 2013 Bern University Honours John le Carre Swiss Broadcasting Corporation 6 December 2008 Archived from the original on 3 December 2013 Retrieved 9 March 2013 The Goethe Medal Award Recipients 1955 2012 Goethe Institute Archived from the original on 26 December 2012 Retrieved 5 March 2013 Flood Alison 21 June 2011 Germany honours Le Carre with Goethe Medal The Guardian Archived from the original on 9 August 2020 Retrieved 13 December 2020 Oxford Announces Honorary Degrees for 2012 University of Oxford 19 January 2012 Archived from the original on 26 April 2013 Retrieved 5 March 2013 2019 David Cornwell John le Carre The Olof Palme Memorial Fund 10 January 2020 Archived from the original on 20 January 2020 Retrieved 10 January 2020 Flood Alison Cain Sian 10 January 2020 John le Carre wins 100 000 prize for contribution to democracy The Guardian Archived from the original on 7 June 2020 Retrieved 31 May 2020 The 50 greatest British writers since 1945 The Times 5 January 2008 Archived from the original on 19 January 2014 Retrieved 24 July 2015 Sources edit Beene Lynn Dianne 1992 John le Carre New York Twayne Publishers ISBN 9780805770131 Cobbs John L 1998 Understanding John Le Carre University of South Carolina Press ISBN 978 1 57003 168 7 Manning Toby 25 January 2018 John le Carre and the Cold War Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 350 03640 6 Further reading editAronoff Myron J 1998 The Spy Novels of John le Carre Balancing Ethics and Politics Palgrave Macmillan doi 10 1057 9780312299453 ISBN 9780312214821 Bruccoli Matthew J Baughman Judith S eds 2004 Conversations with John le Carre University Press of Mississippi ISBN 978 1 57806 669 8 Dawson Suleika 2022 The Secret Heart John Le Carre An Intimate Memoir HarperCollins ISBN 9780008533038 Sisman Adam 2015 John le Carre The Biography Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 9781408827932 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to John le Carre nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to John le Carre John le Carre at IMDb nbsp Two interviews at NPR s Fresh Air John le Carre discography at Discogs nbsp Two letters at Leeds University Library Portraits of John le Carre at the National Portrait Gallery London nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John le Carre amp oldid 1221069069, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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