fbpx
Wikipedia

Len Deighton

Leonard Cyril Deighton (/ˈdtən/; born 18 February 1929) is a British author. His publications have included cookery books, history and military history, but he is best known for his spy novels.

Len Deighton
Born
Leonard Cyril Deighton

(1929-02-18) 18 February 1929 (age 93)
Marylebone, London, England
Alma materRoyal College of Art
Occupation(s)Writer, illustrator
WorksSee bibliography
SpouseYsabele Deighton
ChildrenAlexander, Antoni

After completing his national service in the Royal Air Force, Deighton attended art school in London, and graduated from the Royal College of Art in 1955. He had several jobs before becoming a book and magazine illustrator—including designing the cover for first UK edition of Jack Kerouac's 1957 work On the Road. He also worked for a period in an advertising agency. During an extended holiday in France he wrote his first novel, The IPCRESS File, which was published in 1962, and was a critical and commercial success. He wrote several spy novels featuring the same central character, a working-class intelligence officer, cynical and tough.

Between 1962 and 1966 Deighton was the food correspondent for The Observer and drew cookstrips—black and white graphic recipes with a limited number of words. A selection of these were collected and published in 1965 as Len Deighton's Action Cook Book, the first of five cookery books he wrote. Other topics of non-fiction include history, particularly military history.

Several of Deighton's works have been adapted for film and other media. Films include The Ipcress File (1965), Funeral in Berlin (1966), Billion Dollar Brain (1967) and Spy Story (1976). In 1988 Granada Television produced the miniseries Game, Set and Match based on his trilogy of the same name, and in 1995 BBC Radio 4 broadcast a "real time" dramatisation of his novel Bomber.

Biography

Early life and early career: 1929–1961

Deighton was born in Marylebone, London, on 18 February 1929.[1] His father was the chauffeur and mechanic for Campbell Dodgson, the Keeper of Prints and Drawings at the British Museum; Deighton's mother was a part-time cook. At the time the family lived in Gloucester Place Mews near Baker Street.[2][3] In 1940, at the age of eleven, Deighton witnessed the arrest of Anna Wolkoff, a British subject of Russian descent for whom his mother cooked; Wolkoff was detained as a Nazi spy and charged with stealing correspondence between Winston Churchill and Franklin D. Roosevelt.[4] Deighton later said that observing her arrest was "a major factor in my decision to write a spy story at my first attempt at fiction".[5]

Deighton was educated at St Marylebone Grammar School, but was moved to an emergency school for part of the Second World War.[6] After leaving school, Deighton worked as a railway clerk[7] before being conscripted at the age of 17 for national service, which he completed with the Royal Air Force. While in the RAF he was trained as a photographer, often recording crime scenes as part of his duties.[6][7]

After two and a half years with the RAF, Deighton received a demobilisation grant, enabling him to study at the Saint Martin's School of Art where he won a scholarship to the Royal College of Art, graduating from the latter in 1955.[8][9] He worked as a flight attendant for British Overseas Airways Corporation (BOAC) between 1956 and 1962 before becoming a professional illustrator. Much of his work as an illustrator was in advertising—he worked for agencies in New York and London—but he also illustrated magazines and over 200 book covers, including for the first UK edition of Jack Kerouac's 1957 work On the Road.[3][6][10]

Publishing career: 1961–

Following the publication of a cartoon cookery illustration in the Daily Express in 1961, Deighton was commissioned by The Observer to provide a "Cookstrip" for the paper's magazine, which he did between March 1962 and August 1966.[11] Deighton had come up with the concept while he was at art school and working as a porter in the restaurant of the Royal Festival Hall, where he had occasionally assisted the chefs in preparing dishes. He made sketches to remember some of the steps he undertook.[12] He later explained:

I was buying expensive cookbooks. I'm very messy, and didn't want to take them into the kitchen. So I wrote out the recipes on paper, and it was easier for me to draw three eggs than write 'three eggs'. So I drew three eggs, then put in an arrow. For me it was a natural way to work.[13]

In 1962 Deighton's first novel, The IPCRESS File, was published; it had been written in 1960 while he was staying in the Dordogne;[7] the book was soon a commercial success.[14][15] The story introduced a working-class protagonist, cynical and tough, who was called by the name "Harry" once, although the character says he does not remember whether he had used that name; he was given the name Harry Palmer in the 1965 film adaptation.[1][a]

Deighton sees the character not as an anti-hero, but as "a romantic, incorruptible figure in the mould of Philip Marlowe".[14] Deighton described the inspiration of using a working-class spy among the Oxbridge-educated members of the Establishment as coming from his time at the London advertising agency, when he was the only member of the company's board not to have been educated at Eton. He said "The IPCRESS File is about spies on the surface, but it's also really about a grammar school boy among public school boys and the difficulties he faces."[16]

After two further novels with his "Harry" character—Horse Under Water (1963) and Funeral in Berlin (1964)—Deighton published two cookbooks in 1965, Len Deighton's Action Cook Book (a collection of his cookstrips from The Observer) and Où est le garlic, a collection of French recipes.[10][17] Two further novels in the spy series then followed—Billion-Dollar Brain (1966) and An Expensive Place to Die (1967)— after which he published his first historical non-fiction work, The Assassination of President Kennedy (1967), co-written with M. Rand and H. Lockston.[17] In September that year he wrote an article in The Sunday Times Magazine about Operation Snowdrop, an SAS attack on Benghazi during the Second World War. The following year David Stirling, the leader of the raid, was awarded substantial damages in libel from the article.[18] During the mid-1960s Deighton wrote for Playboy as a travel correspondent, and he provided a piece on the boom in spy fiction; An Expensive Place to Die was serialised in the magazine in 1967.[19]

In 1968, Deighton was the producer of the film Only When I Larf, which was based on his novel of the same name.[20] He was the writer and co-producer of Oh! What a Lovely War in 1969, but did not enjoy the process of making films, and had his name removed from the film's credits.[3][21]

In 1970 Deighton wrote Bomber, a fictional account of an RAF Bomber Command raid that goes wrong.[10] To produce the novel he used an IBM MT/ST, and it is likely that this was the first novel to be written using a word processor.[22][23] Deighton's next non-fictional work, Fighter: The True Story of the Battle of Britain, was published in 1977.[14] This was followed in 1978 by another novel, SS-GB, the idea for which came from Ray Hawkey, Deighton's friend from art school and the designer of the covers of several of his books. While the two were discussing what would have happened if the Germans had won the Second World War, Hawkey asked Deighton if he thought there could be an alternative history novel.[11][24]

From 1983 Deighton wrote three trilogies: Berlin Game (1983), Mexico Set (1984) and London Match (1985); Spy Hook (1988), Spy Line (1989) and Spy Sinker (1990); and Faith (1994), Hope (1995) and Charity (1996). Winter, a companion novel dealing with the lives of a German family from 1899 to 1945, which also provides an historical background to several of the characters from the trilogies, was published in 1987. The trilogies are centred on Bernard Samson, a tough, cynical and disrespectful MI6 intelligence officer.[1][25]

Personal life

Deighton married the illustrator Shirley Thompson in 1960;[1] the couple were divorced in 1976, having not lived together for over five years.[26] He left Britain in 1969, and has lived abroad since, including in Ireland, Austria, France, the United States and Portugal.[9][27] He lived for a while in Blackrock, County Louth,[28] where he married Ysabele, the daughter of a Dutch diplomat.[27]

Deighton does not like giving interviews, and these have been rare throughout his life; he also avoids appearing at literary festivals.[29][30] He says that he does not enjoy being a writer and that "The best thing about writing books is being at a party and telling some pretty girl you write books, the worst thing is sitting at a typewriter and actually writing the book."[16] After completing the Faith, Hope and Charity trilogy he decided to take a year off writing; at the end of the period, he decided that writing was "a mug's game" that he did not miss and did not have to do.[31]

Works

Novels

According to the film and media historian Alan Burton, The Ipcress File along with John le Carré's The Spy Who Came In from the Cold, "changed the nature of British spy fiction" as it brought in "a more insolent, disillusioned and cynical style to the espionage story".[32] The academic George Grella considers Deighton's novels to be "stylish, witty [and] well-crafted",[33] while providing "a convincingly detailed picture of the world of espionage while carefully examining the ethics and morality of that world".[34]

The academic Clive Bloom considers that after Funeral in Berlin was published in 1964, Deighton "established a place for himself ... in the front rank of the spy genre, along with Graham Greene, Ian Fleming and John le Carré".[35] Deighton's later works were less oblique than the earlier ones, and had, according to Bloom, "more subtlety and deeper characterization".[35] Oliver Buckton, the professor of literature, also considers Deighton to be in the forefront of post-war spy writers.[36] The crime writer and poet Julian Symons writes that "[t]he constant crackle of his dialogue makes Deighton a kind of poet of the spy story".[37]

Grella considers Deighton to be "the angry young man of the espionage novel", with the central characters of his main novels—"Harry" from the Ipcress series and Bernard Samson from the nine novels in which he appears—both working class, cynical and streetwise, in contrast to the upper class and ineffective seniors in their respective novels.[34][32]

Cookery books

Deighton also wrote five cookery books, and wrote and drew the cookstrips in The Observer for four years.[11][b] Several of the strips are pinned up in the background of the film set of Harry Palmer's kitchen in The Ipcress File.[13] In January 2015 Deighton created 12 new cookstrips which were printed monthly in the Observer Food Magazine.[13]

History books

Deighton began writing works of history after being advised to by the historian A. J. P. Taylor. His first work on the Second World War was Fighter, published in 1977.[38] The book was well received by readers and critics, although it was "censured by some for including interviews with German participants", according to the journalist Jake Kerridge.[14] Taylor wrote the introduction for the book, describing it as a "brilliant analysis";[39] Albert Speer, once the Minister of Armaments for Adolf Hitler, thought it "an excellent, most thorough examination. I read page after page with fascination".[40]

Blitzkrieg, his history of the rise of the Nazis and the fall of France, has a foreword written by General Walter Nehring, Chief of Staff to General Heinz Guderian.[41] His final history book is Blood, Tears and Folly: An Objective Look at World War II, which examined the events of the war up until 1942.[42]

Adaptations

Several of Deighton's novels have been adapted as films including The IPCRESS File, Funeral in Berlin, Billion Dollar Brain and Spy Story. All feature the Deighton character that was once called "Harry" in the books, but who was given the full name "Harry Palmer" for the films; the producer for two of the three films, Harry Saltzman, came up with the name.[43] Two television films also featured Palmer: Bullet to Beijing (1995) and Midnight in Saint Petersburg (1996); they were not based on Deighton's stories. All the films except Spy Story feature Michael Caine as Palmer.[44]

The first trilogy of his Bernard Samson novel series was made into a thirteen-part television series by Granada Television in 1988.[25][45] Although Quentin Tarantino expressed interest in filming the trilogy,[46] the project was not forthcoming.[47] The nine Samson novels were in pre-production with Clerkenwell Films in 2013, with a script by Simon Beaufoy.[48]

In 2017 the BBC adapted Deighton's novel SS-GB for a five-part TV miniseries, broadcast in one-hour episodes; Sam Riley played the lead role of Detective Superintendent Douglas Archer.[49] In 1995 BBC Radio 4 broadcast a "real time" dramatisation of Bomber. The drama threaded through the station's unchangeable schedule of news and current affairs from early morning to midnight.[50]

Legacy and influence

Deighton's work has been acknowledged by the thriller writer Jeremy Duns as being an influence on his own work.[51] In Letters from Burma, the politician Aung San Suu Kyi mentions reading Deighton's books, while under house arrest. Suu Kyi wrote that she was passionate about Arthur Conan Doyle's tales of Sherlock Holmes and the spy novels of le Carré and Deighton.[52] When asked by Christie's about his love for Indian art and how he started his collection, the writer V. S. Naipaul credited Deighton. "I met Len Deighton, the thriller writer, at dinner many years ago. He demonstrated to me that Indian art could really be approachable. I bought from ... Maggs because of Len Deighton pushing me onto [them] as being a very fair dealer, saying that they do not charge you much more than they should. That's a marvellous thing to be told".[53]

Deighton's 1970 novel Bomber was listed in Anthony Burgess's work Ninety-nine Novels, as one of the 99 best novels in English since 1939.[54] Bomber, the third album of the rock group Motörhead, was named after the novel, as the band's singer, Lemmy, was reading it at the time.[55]

Notes and references

Notes

  1. ^ The character appears in several of Deighton's works:
  2. ^ These are:
    • Len Deighton's Action Cook Book (1965) OCLC 30271545
    • Où est le garlic (1965) OCLC 1112522953
    • Basic French Cooking (1979) OCLC 473056466
    • ABC of French Food (1989) OCLC 1145799233
    • Basic French Cookery Course (1990) OCLC 803775071

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "Len Deighton". Contemporary Authors.
  2. ^ "The Deighton File". 26 May 2009, Event occurs at 4:20–4:50.
  3. ^ a b c Dawson Scott 2006a, p. 43.
  4. ^ Masters 1987, p. 257.
  5. ^ Campbell 1992, p. 101.
  6. ^ a b c Buckton 2012, p. 55.
  7. ^ a b c Masters 1987, p. 258.
  8. ^ Milward-Oliver 1987, p. 11.
  9. ^ a b Dawson Scott 2006b.
  10. ^ a b c Brown 1987, p. 12.
  11. ^ a b c Milward-Oliver 1987, p. 98.
  12. ^ Walsh 2009.
  13. ^ a b c Stummer 2014.
  14. ^ a b c d Kerridge 2017, p. 55.
  15. ^ Krueger 2014, p. 102.
  16. ^ a b Kerridge 2019, p. 44.
  17. ^ a b Jackson & Gwilliam 1999, pp. 16–17.
  18. ^ "Libel Damages For 'Operation Snowdrop' Leader". The Times.
  19. ^ Hines 2018, pp. 160–161.
  20. ^ "Only When I Larf (1968)". British Film Institute.
  21. ^ Kerridge 2009, p. 10.
  22. ^ The Daily News of Los Angeles. 17 January 2020.
  23. ^ Kirschenbaum 2013, p. 1.
  24. ^ Deighton 2017.
  25. ^ a b Woods 2008, p. 118.
  26. ^ Bird 1976, p. 39.
  27. ^ a b Bateman 1997.
  28. ^ Egan 2018.
  29. ^ Didcock 2009, p. 17.
  30. ^ "The Deighton File". 26 May 2009, Event occurs at 1:15–2:05.
  31. ^ "The Deighton File". 26 May 2009, Event occurs at 3:45–4:05.
  32. ^ a b Burton 2016, p. 119.
  33. ^ Grella 1988, p. 449.
  34. ^ a b Grella 1988, p. 450.
  35. ^ a b Bloom 1995, p. 46.
  36. ^ Buckton 2012, p. 57.
  37. ^ Symons 1985, p. 229.
  38. ^ Buckton 2012, p. 67.
  39. ^ Taylor 1994, p. xxvi.
  40. ^ "Books". The Bookseller.
  41. ^ Deighton 1982, Title page.
  42. ^ Jackson & Gwilliam 1999, p. 15.
  43. ^ Burton 2018, p. 99.
  44. ^ Barrett, Herrera & Baumann 2011, p. 27.
  45. ^ "Game, Set and Match (1988)". British Film Institute.
  46. ^ Child 2009.
  47. ^ Sharf 2019.
  48. ^ Kemp 2013.
  49. ^ Whitworth 2017.
  50. ^ "Bean There, Done That!". Northwest Vision and Media.
  51. ^ Duns 2009.
  52. ^ "Back to prayer for Suu Kyi". Capital News.
  53. ^ "Collectors & their collections: V.S. Naipaul". Christie's.
  54. ^ Burgess 1984, p. 1.
  55. ^ Grow 2015.

Books

  • Barrett, Oliver Boyd; Herrera, David; Baumann, James A. (2011). Hollywood and the CIA: Cinema, Defense and Subversion. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-136-80676-6.
  • Bloom, Clive, ed. (1995). Modern Crime and Suspense Writers. New York: Chelsea House. ISBN 978-0-5852-2979-9.
  • Buckton, Oliver (2012). "Len Deighton". In Parini, Jay (ed.). British Writers. Supplement XVIII. Detroit, MI: Gale. pp. 55–72. ISBN 978-1-4144-8026-8.
  • Burton, Alan (2016). Historical Dictionary of British Spy Fiction. London: Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1-4422-5587-6.
  • Burton, Alan (2018). Looking-Glass Wars: Spies on British Screens since 1960. Wilmington, DE: Vernon Press. ISBN 978-1-62273-290-6.
  • Deighton, Len (1982). Blitzkrieg: From the Rise of Hitler to the Fall of Dunkirk. New York: Ballantine Books. ISBN 978-0-7126-7428-7.
  • Grella, George (1988). "Len Deighton". In Reilly, John M. (ed.). Twentieth Century Crime & Mystery Writers. London: Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-349-81366-7.
  • Hines, Claire (2018). The playboy and James Bond: 007, Ian Fleming and Playboy magazine. Manchester: Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-1-5261-1616-1.
  • Masters, Anthony (1987). Literary Agents: The Novelist as Spy. London: Basil Blackwell. ISBN 978-0-6311-4979-8.
  • Milward-Oliver, Edward (1987). The Len Deighton Companion. London: Grafton. ISBN 978-0-586-07000-0.
  • Symons, Julian (1985). Bloody Murder: From the Detective Story to the Crime Novel. New York: Viking. ISBN 978-0-6708-0096-4.
  • Taylor, A. J. P. (1994). Introduction. Fighter: The True Story of the Battle of Britain. By Deighton, Len. New York: Harper Paperbacks. ISBN 978-0-0610-0802-3.
  • Woods, Brett F. (2008). Neutral Ground: A Political History of Espionage Fiction. New York: Algora Publishing. ISBN 978-0-87586-533-1.

Broadcast media

  • "The Deighton File". The Author Archive Collection. 26 May 2009.

Journals

  • "Books". The Bookseller (3838): 80. 1979.
  • Brown, Geoffrey (February 1987). "The Thrillers and Spy Novels of Len Deighton". The Book and Magazine Collector. Diamond Publishing Group (35).
  • Jackson, Crispin; Gwilliam, Graham (March 1999). "Len Deighton: The Master Thriller Writer Turns Seventy". The Book and Magazine Collector. Diamond Publishing Group (180).

News media

  • "Back to prayer for Suu Kyi". Capital News. 12 August 2009.
  • Bateman, Michael (6 April 1997). "A kitchen thriller". The Independent.
  • Bird, David (26 November 1976). "Notes on People". The New York Times. p. 39.
  • Burgess, Anthony (5 February 1984). "Modern Novels; The 99 Best". The New York Times. Section 7; Page 1.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  • Campbell, Christy (21 June 1992). "Spies With Class". The Sunday Telegraph. p. 101.
  • Child, Ben (14 August 2009). "Tarantino mulls Deighton spy film to rival Bond". The Guardian.
  • Dawson Scott, Robert (4 January 2006a). "Len Deighton: The spy and I". The Independent. p. 43.
  • Dawson Scott, Robert (7 January 2006b). "A class act, not a class warrior". The Times. (subscription required)
  • Didcock, Barry (31 May 2009). "Tributes to the lives and times of two great talents". Sunday Herald. p. 17.
  • Duns, Jeremy (19 February 2009). "Jeremy Duns pays tribute to novelist Len Deighton". The Guardian.
  • Egan, Barry (17 September 2018). "Declan Lynch on his childhood and why 'alcoholic' is more of a stigma than words like 'depression'". Irish Independent.
  • Grow, Kory (28 August 2015). "Motorhead's Lemmy: My Life in 15 Snarls". Rolling Stone.
  • Kemp, Stuart (4 November 2013). "Simon Beaufoy to Adapt Len Deighton's Spy Novels for TV". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 29 March 2020.
  • Kerridge, Jake (14 February 2009). "The Deighton file: a life of reluctance and intrigue". The Daily Telegraph. p. 10.
  • Kerridge, Jake (19 February 2017). "Len Deighton interview: 'Nobody could have had a happier life than I've had'". The Sunday Telegraph. p. 55.
  • Kerridge, Jake (18 February 2019). "From Ian Fleming to Ann Cleeves: Desert Island Discs' best crime writer castaways". The Daily Telegraph. p. 44.
  • Kirschenbaum, Matthew (1 March 2013). "The Book-Writing Machine: What was the first novel ever written on a word processor?". Slate.
  • Krueger, Christine L. (2014). Encyclopedia of British Writers: 19th and 20th Centuries. New York: Infobase Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4381-0870-4.
  • "Libel Damages For 'Operation Snowdrop' Leader". The Times. 24 May 1968. p. 15.
  • Stummer, Robin (14 December 2014). "Len Deighton's Observer cookstrips, Michael Caine and the 1960s". The Observer. from the original on 14 June 2016.
  • "Through the lens of half a century, we look back on the moments that shaped entertainment and pop culture". The Daily News of Los Angeles. 17 January 2020. p. 1.
  • Walsh, John (17 June 2009). "A taste of the action: Len Deighton's cult Sixties' cookbook is back". The Independent. from the original on 5 March 2016.
  • Whitworth, Damian (11 February 2017). "There's a Nazi in No 10 and the SS in Scotland Yard". The Times.

Websites

  • . Northwest Vision and Media. Archived from the original on 6 October 2008. Retrieved 26 March 2020.
  • "Collectors & their collections: V.S. Naipaul". Christie's. 1 June 2015. Retrieved 31 March 2020.
  • Deighton, Len (9 July 2017). "Len Deighton reveals how he wrote SS-GB, the bestseller that imagines Hitler had won the war". Radio Times. Retrieved 26 March 2020.
  • "Game, Set and Match (1988)". British Film Institute. Retrieved 30 March 2020.
  • . Contemporary Authors. Gale. Archived from the original on 15 April 2016. Retrieved 25 March 2016. (subscription required)
  • Sharf, Zack (3 October 2019). "Quentin Tarantino's Last Movie: 17 Unmade Projects That Could Be His Final Film". IndieWire. Retrieved 29 March 2020.
  • "Only When I Larf (1968)". British Film Institute. Retrieved 28 March 2020.

External links

  • The Deighton Dossier – website about Len Deighton
  • Len Deighton at IMDb
  • Petri Liukkonen. "Len Deighton". Books and Writers

deighton, leonard, cyril, deighton, born, february, 1929, british, author, publications, have, included, cookery, books, history, military, history, best, known, novels, bornleonard, cyril, deighton, 1929, february, 1929, marylebone, london, englandalma, mater. Leonard Cyril Deighton ˈ d eɪ t en born 18 February 1929 is a British author His publications have included cookery books history and military history but he is best known for his spy novels Len DeightonBornLeonard Cyril Deighton 1929 02 18 18 February 1929 age 93 Marylebone London EnglandAlma materRoyal College of ArtOccupation s Writer illustratorWorksSee bibliographySpouseYsabele DeightonChildrenAlexander AntoniAfter completing his national service in the Royal Air Force Deighton attended art school in London and graduated from the Royal College of Art in 1955 He had several jobs before becoming a book and magazine illustrator including designing the cover for first UK edition of Jack Kerouac s 1957 work On the Road He also worked for a period in an advertising agency During an extended holiday in France he wrote his first novel The IPCRESS File which was published in 1962 and was a critical and commercial success He wrote several spy novels featuring the same central character a working class intelligence officer cynical and tough Between 1962 and 1966 Deighton was the food correspondent for The Observer and drew cookstrips black and white graphic recipes with a limited number of words A selection of these were collected and published in 1965 as Len Deighton s Action Cook Book the first of five cookery books he wrote Other topics of non fiction include history particularly military history Several of Deighton s works have been adapted for film and other media Films include The Ipcress File 1965 Funeral in Berlin 1966 Billion Dollar Brain 1967 and Spy Story 1976 In 1988 Granada Television produced the miniseries Game Set and Match based on his trilogy of the same name and in 1995 BBC Radio 4 broadcast a real time dramatisation of his novel Bomber Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life and early career 1929 1961 1 2 Publishing career 1961 1 3 Personal life 2 Works 2 1 Novels 2 2 Cookery books 2 3 History books 2 4 Adaptations 3 Legacy and influence 4 Notes and references 4 1 Notes 4 2 References 4 2 1 Books 4 2 2 Broadcast media 4 2 3 Journals 4 2 4 News media 4 2 5 Websites 5 External linksBiography EditEarly life and early career 1929 1961 Edit Deighton was born in Marylebone London on 18 February 1929 1 His father was the chauffeur and mechanic for Campbell Dodgson the Keeper of Prints and Drawings at the British Museum Deighton s mother was a part time cook At the time the family lived in Gloucester Place Mews near Baker Street 2 3 In 1940 at the age of eleven Deighton witnessed the arrest of Anna Wolkoff a British subject of Russian descent for whom his mother cooked Wolkoff was detained as a Nazi spy and charged with stealing correspondence between Winston Churchill and Franklin D Roosevelt 4 Deighton later said that observing her arrest was a major factor in my decision to write a spy story at my first attempt at fiction 5 Deighton was educated at St Marylebone Grammar School but was moved to an emergency school for part of the Second World War 6 After leaving school Deighton worked as a railway clerk 7 before being conscripted at the age of 17 for national service which he completed with the Royal Air Force While in the RAF he was trained as a photographer often recording crime scenes as part of his duties 6 7 After two and a half years with the RAF Deighton received a demobilisation grant enabling him to study at the Saint Martin s School of Art where he won a scholarship to the Royal College of Art graduating from the latter in 1955 8 9 He worked as a flight attendant for British Overseas Airways Corporation BOAC between 1956 and 1962 before becoming a professional illustrator Much of his work as an illustrator was in advertising he worked for agencies in New York and London but he also illustrated magazines and over 200 book covers including for the first UK edition of Jack Kerouac s 1957 work On the Road 3 6 10 Publishing career 1961 Edit Cookstrip for Boeuf Bourguignon Following the publication of a cartoon cookery illustration in the Daily Express in 1961 Deighton was commissioned by The Observer to provide a Cookstrip for the paper s magazine which he did between March 1962 and August 1966 11 Deighton had come up with the concept while he was at art school and working as a porter in the restaurant of the Royal Festival Hall where he had occasionally assisted the chefs in preparing dishes He made sketches to remember some of the steps he undertook 12 He later explained I was buying expensive cookbooks I m very messy and didn t want to take them into the kitchen So I wrote out the recipes on paper and it was easier for me to draw three eggs than write three eggs So I drew three eggs then put in an arrow For me it was a natural way to work 13 In 1962 Deighton s first novel The IPCRESS File was published it had been written in 1960 while he was staying in the Dordogne 7 the book was soon a commercial success 14 15 The story introduced a working class protagonist cynical and tough who was called by the name Harry once although the character says he does not remember whether he had used that name he was given the name Harry Palmer in the 1965 film adaptation 1 a Deighton sees the character not as an anti hero but as a romantic incorruptible figure in the mould of Philip Marlowe 14 Deighton described the inspiration of using a working class spy among the Oxbridge educated members of the Establishment as coming from his time at the London advertising agency when he was the only member of the company s board not to have been educated at Eton He said The IPCRESS File is about spies on the surface but it s also really about a grammar school boy among public school boys and the difficulties he faces 16 After two further novels with his Harry character Horse Under Water 1963 and Funeral in Berlin 1964 Deighton published two cookbooks in 1965 Len Deighton s Action Cook Book a collection of his cookstrips from The Observer and Ou est le garlic a collection of French recipes 10 17 Two further novels in the spy series then followed Billion Dollar Brain 1966 and An Expensive Place to Die 1967 after which he published his first historical non fiction work The Assassination of President Kennedy 1967 co written with M Rand and H Lockston 17 In September that year he wrote an article in The Sunday Times Magazine about Operation Snowdrop an SAS attack on Benghazi during the Second World War The following year David Stirling the leader of the raid was awarded substantial damages in libel from the article 18 During the mid 1960s Deighton wrote for Playboy as a travel correspondent and he provided a piece on the boom in spy fiction An Expensive Place to Die was serialised in the magazine in 1967 19 In 1968 Deighton was the producer of the film Only When I Larf which was based on his novel of the same name 20 He was the writer and co producer of Oh What a Lovely War in 1969 but did not enjoy the process of making films and had his name removed from the film s credits 3 21 In 1970 Deighton wrote Bomber a fictional account of an RAF Bomber Command raid that goes wrong 10 To produce the novel he used an IBM MT ST and it is likely that this was the first novel to be written using a word processor 22 23 Deighton s next non fictional work Fighter The True Story of the Battle of Britain was published in 1977 14 This was followed in 1978 by another novel SS GB the idea for which came from Ray Hawkey Deighton s friend from art school and the designer of the covers of several of his books While the two were discussing what would have happened if the Germans had won the Second World War Hawkey asked Deighton if he thought there could be an alternative history novel 11 24 From 1983 Deighton wrote three trilogies Berlin Game 1983 Mexico Set 1984 and London Match 1985 Spy Hook 1988 Spy Line 1989 and Spy Sinker 1990 and Faith 1994 Hope 1995 and Charity 1996 Winter a companion novel dealing with the lives of a German family from 1899 to 1945 which also provides an historical background to several of the characters from the trilogies was published in 1987 The trilogies are centred on Bernard Samson a tough cynical and disrespectful MI6 intelligence officer 1 25 Personal life Edit Deighton married the illustrator Shirley Thompson in 1960 1 the couple were divorced in 1976 having not lived together for over five years 26 He left Britain in 1969 and has lived abroad since including in Ireland Austria France the United States and Portugal 9 27 He lived for a while in Blackrock County Louth 28 where he married Ysabele the daughter of a Dutch diplomat 27 Deighton does not like giving interviews and these have been rare throughout his life he also avoids appearing at literary festivals 29 30 He says that he does not enjoy being a writer and that The best thing about writing books is being at a party and telling some pretty girl you write books the worst thing is sitting at a typewriter and actually writing the book 16 After completing the Faith Hope and Charity trilogy he decided to take a year off writing at the end of the period he decided that writing was a mug s game that he did not miss and did not have to do 31 Works EditMain article Len Deighton bibliography Novels Edit According to the film and media historian Alan Burton The Ipcress File along with John le Carre s The Spy Who Came In from the Cold changed the nature of British spy fiction as it brought in a more insolent disillusioned and cynical style to the espionage story 32 The academic George Grella considers Deighton s novels to be stylish witty and well crafted 33 while providing a convincingly detailed picture of the world of espionage while carefully examining the ethics and morality of that world 34 The academic Clive Bloom considers that after Funeral in Berlin was published in 1964 Deighton established a place for himself in the front rank of the spy genre along with Graham Greene Ian Fleming and John le Carre 35 Deighton s later works were less oblique than the earlier ones and had according to Bloom more subtlety and deeper characterization 35 Oliver Buckton the professor of literature also considers Deighton to be in the forefront of post war spy writers 36 The crime writer and poet Julian Symons writes that t he constant crackle of his dialogue makes Deighton a kind of poet of the spy story 37 Grella considers Deighton to be the angry young man of the espionage novel with the central characters of his main novels Harry from the Ipcress series and Bernard Samson from the nine novels in which he appears both working class cynical and streetwise in contrast to the upper class and ineffective seniors in their respective novels 34 32 Cookery books Edit Deighton also wrote five cookery books and wrote and drew the cookstrips in The Observer for four years 11 b Several of the strips are pinned up in the background of the film set of Harry Palmer s kitchen in The Ipcress File 13 In January 2015 Deighton created 12 new cookstrips which were printed monthly in the Observer Food Magazine 13 History books Edit Deighton began writing works of history after being advised to by the historian A J P Taylor His first work on the Second World War was Fighter published in 1977 38 The book was well received by readers and critics although it was censured by some for including interviews with German participants according to the journalist Jake Kerridge 14 Taylor wrote the introduction for the book describing it as a brilliant analysis 39 Albert Speer once the Minister of Armaments for Adolf Hitler thought it an excellent most thorough examination I read page after page with fascination 40 Blitzkrieg his history of the rise of the Nazis and the fall of France has a foreword written by General Walter Nehring Chief of Staff to General Heinz Guderian 41 His final history book is Blood Tears and Folly An Objective Look at World War II which examined the events of the war up until 1942 42 Adaptations Edit Several of Deighton s novels have been adapted as films including The IPCRESS File Funeral in Berlin Billion Dollar Brain and Spy Story All feature the Deighton character that was once called Harry in the books but who was given the full name Harry Palmer for the films the producer for two of the three films Harry Saltzman came up with the name 43 Two television films also featured Palmer Bullet to Beijing 1995 and Midnight in Saint Petersburg 1996 they were not based on Deighton s stories All the films except Spy Story feature Michael Caine as Palmer 44 The first trilogy of his Bernard Samson novel series was made into a thirteen part television series by Granada Television in 1988 25 45 Although Quentin Tarantino expressed interest in filming the trilogy 46 the project was not forthcoming 47 The nine Samson novels were in pre production with Clerkenwell Films in 2013 with a script by Simon Beaufoy 48 In 2017 the BBC adapted Deighton s novel SS GB for a five part TV miniseries broadcast in one hour episodes Sam Riley played the lead role of Detective Superintendent Douglas Archer 49 In 1995 BBC Radio 4 broadcast a real time dramatisation of Bomber The drama threaded through the station s unchangeable schedule of news and current affairs from early morning to midnight 50 Legacy and influence EditDeighton s work has been acknowledged by the thriller writer Jeremy Duns as being an influence on his own work 51 In Letters from Burma the politician Aung San Suu Kyi mentions reading Deighton s books while under house arrest Suu Kyi wrote that she was passionate about Arthur Conan Doyle s tales of Sherlock Holmes and the spy novels of le Carre and Deighton 52 When asked by Christie s about his love for Indian art and how he started his collection the writer V S Naipaul credited Deighton I met Len Deighton the thriller writer at dinner many years ago He demonstrated to me that Indian art could really be approachable I bought from Maggs because of Len Deighton pushing me onto them as being a very fair dealer saying that they do not charge you much more than they should That s a marvellous thing to be told 53 Deighton s 1970 novel Bomber was listed in Anthony Burgess s work Ninety nine Novels as one of the 99 best novels in English since 1939 54 Bomber the third album of the rock group Motorhead was named after the novel as the band s singer Lemmy was reading it at the time 55 Notes and references EditNotes Edit The character appears in several of Deighton s works The IPCRESS File 1962 Horse Under Water 1963 Funeral in Berlin 1964 Billion Dollar Brain 1966 An Expensive Place to Die 1967 Spy Story 1972 Yesterday s Spy 1975 Twinkle Twinkle Little Spy 1976 1 These are Len Deighton s Action Cook Book 1965 OCLC 30271545 Ou est le garlic 1965 OCLC 1112522953 Basic French Cooking 1979 OCLC 473056466 ABC of French Food 1989 OCLC 1145799233 Basic French Cookery Course 1990 OCLC 803775071 References Edit a b c d e Len Deighton Contemporary Authors The Deighton File 26 May 2009 Event occurs at 4 20 4 50 a b c Dawson Scott 2006a p 43 Masters 1987 p 257 Campbell 1992 p 101 a b c Buckton 2012 p 55 a b c Masters 1987 p 258 Milward Oliver 1987 p 11 a b Dawson Scott 2006b a b c Brown 1987 p 12 a b c Milward Oliver 1987 p 98 Walsh 2009 a b c Stummer 2014 a b c d Kerridge 2017 p 55 Krueger 2014 p 102 a b Kerridge 2019 p 44 a b Jackson amp Gwilliam 1999 pp 16 17 Libel Damages For Operation Snowdrop Leader The Times Hines 2018 pp 160 161 Only When I Larf 1968 British Film Institute Kerridge 2009 p 10 The Daily News of Los Angeles 17 January 2020 Kirschenbaum 2013 p 1 Deighton 2017 a b Woods 2008 p 118 Bird 1976 p 39 a b Bateman 1997 Egan 2018 Didcock 2009 p 17 The Deighton File 26 May 2009 Event occurs at 1 15 2 05 The Deighton File 26 May 2009 Event occurs at 3 45 4 05 a b Burton 2016 p 119 Grella 1988 p 449 a b Grella 1988 p 450 a b Bloom 1995 p 46 Buckton 2012 p 57 Symons 1985 p 229 Buckton 2012 p 67 Taylor 1994 p xxvi Books The Bookseller Deighton 1982 Title page Jackson amp Gwilliam 1999 p 15 Burton 2018 p 99 Barrett Herrera amp Baumann 2011 p 27 Game Set and Match 1988 British Film Institute Child 2009 Sharf 2019 Kemp 2013 Whitworth 2017 Bean There Done That Northwest Vision and Media Duns 2009 Back to prayer for Suu Kyi Capital News Collectors amp their collections V S Naipaul Christie s Burgess 1984 p 1 Grow 2015 Books Edit Barrett Oliver Boyd Herrera David Baumann James A 2011 Hollywood and the CIA Cinema Defense and Subversion London Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 80676 6 Bloom Clive ed 1995 Modern Crime and Suspense Writers New York Chelsea House ISBN 978 0 5852 2979 9 Buckton Oliver 2012 Len Deighton In Parini Jay ed British Writers Supplement XVIII Detroit MI Gale pp 55 72 ISBN 978 1 4144 8026 8 Burton Alan 2016 Historical Dictionary of British Spy Fiction London Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 4422 5587 6 Burton Alan 2018 Looking Glass Wars Spies on British Screens since 1960 Wilmington DE Vernon Press ISBN 978 1 62273 290 6 Deighton Len 1982 Blitzkrieg From the Rise of Hitler to the Fall of Dunkirk New York Ballantine Books ISBN 978 0 7126 7428 7 Grella George 1988 Len Deighton In Reilly John M ed Twentieth Century Crime amp Mystery Writers London Macmillan ISBN 978 1 349 81366 7 Hines Claire 2018 The playboy and James Bond 007 Ian Fleming and Playboy magazine Manchester Manchester University Press ISBN 978 1 5261 1616 1 Masters Anthony 1987 Literary Agents The Novelist as Spy London Basil Blackwell ISBN 978 0 6311 4979 8 Milward Oliver Edward 1987 The Len Deighton Companion London Grafton ISBN 978 0 586 07000 0 Symons Julian 1985 Bloody Murder From the Detective Story to the Crime Novel New York Viking ISBN 978 0 6708 0096 4 Taylor A J P 1994 Introduction Fighter The True Story of the Battle of Britain By Deighton Len New York Harper Paperbacks ISBN 978 0 0610 0802 3 Woods Brett F 2008 Neutral Ground A Political History of Espionage Fiction New York Algora Publishing ISBN 978 0 87586 533 1 Broadcast media Edit The Deighton File The Author Archive Collection 26 May 2009 Journals Edit Books The Bookseller 3838 80 1979 Brown Geoffrey February 1987 The Thrillers and Spy Novels of Len Deighton The Book and Magazine Collector Diamond Publishing Group 35 Jackson Crispin Gwilliam Graham March 1999 Len Deighton The Master Thriller Writer Turns Seventy The Book and Magazine Collector Diamond Publishing Group 180 News media Edit Back to prayer for Suu Kyi Capital News 12 August 2009 Bateman Michael 6 April 1997 A kitchen thriller The Independent Bird David 26 November 1976 Notes on People The New York Times p 39 Burgess Anthony 5 February 1984 Modern Novels The 99 Best The New York Times Section 7 Page 1 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint location link Campbell Christy 21 June 1992 Spies With Class The Sunday Telegraph p 101 Child Ben 14 August 2009 Tarantino mulls Deighton spy film to rival Bond The Guardian Dawson Scott Robert 4 January 2006a Len Deighton The spy and I The Independent p 43 Dawson Scott Robert 7 January 2006b A class act not a class warrior The Times subscription required Didcock Barry 31 May 2009 Tributes to the lives and times of two great talents Sunday Herald p 17 Duns Jeremy 19 February 2009 Jeremy Duns pays tribute to novelist Len Deighton The Guardian Egan Barry 17 September 2018 Declan Lynch on his childhood and why alcoholic is more of a stigma than words like depression Irish Independent Grow Kory 28 August 2015 Motorhead s Lemmy My Life in 15 Snarls Rolling Stone Kemp Stuart 4 November 2013 Simon Beaufoy to Adapt Len Deighton s Spy Novels for TV The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved 29 March 2020 Kerridge Jake 14 February 2009 The Deighton file a life of reluctance and intrigue The Daily Telegraph p 10 Kerridge Jake 19 February 2017 Len Deighton interview Nobody could have had a happier life than I ve had The Sunday Telegraph p 55 Kerridge Jake 18 February 2019 From Ian Fleming to Ann Cleeves Desert Island Discs best crime writer castaways The Daily Telegraph p 44 Kirschenbaum Matthew 1 March 2013 The Book Writing Machine What was the first novel ever written on a word processor Slate Krueger Christine L 2014 Encyclopedia of British Writers 19th and 20th Centuries New York Infobase Publishing ISBN 978 1 4381 0870 4 Libel Damages For Operation Snowdrop Leader The Times 24 May 1968 p 15 Stummer Robin 14 December 2014 Len Deighton s Observer cookstrips Michael Caine and the 1960s The Observer Archived from the original on 14 June 2016 Through the lens of half a century we look back on the moments that shaped entertainment and pop culture The Daily News of Los Angeles 17 January 2020 p 1 Walsh John 17 June 2009 A taste of the action Len Deighton s cult Sixties cookbook is back The Independent Archived from the original on 5 March 2016 Whitworth Damian 11 February 2017 There s a Nazi in No 10 and the SS in Scotland Yard The Times Websites Edit Bean There Done That Northwest Vision and Media Archived from the original on 6 October 2008 Retrieved 26 March 2020 Collectors amp their collections V S Naipaul Christie s 1 June 2015 Retrieved 31 March 2020 Deighton Len 9 July 2017 Len Deighton reveals how he wrote SS GB the bestseller that imagines Hitler had won the war Radio Times Retrieved 26 March 2020 Game Set and Match 1988 British Film Institute Retrieved 30 March 2020 Len Deighton Contemporary Authors Gale Archived from the original on 15 April 2016 Retrieved 25 March 2016 subscription required Sharf Zack 3 October 2019 Quentin Tarantino s Last Movie 17 Unmade Projects That Could Be His Final Film IndieWire Retrieved 29 March 2020 Only When I Larf 1968 British Film Institute Retrieved 28 March 2020 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Len Deighton The Deighton Dossier website about Len Deighton Len Deighton at IMDb Petri Liukkonen Len Deighton Books and Writers Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Len Deighton amp oldid 1109588104, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.