John le
Carré is about the best genre writer sitting in my bookcase—he writes literate espionage
thrillers with exquisite style, keen observation, and dark wit. His books are
complex in texture and thought and are rich with detail, atmosphere, and
mystery. They bear re-reading, becoming a different experience each time, as
new slippery meanings and treacherous ambiguities pulse under their surfaces. In
le Carré’s world, the concrete under our feet grows thin, eroded by betrayal
and poisonous secrets.
It’s
not surprising his former antagonist Salman Rushdie recently said he thought Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy to be one
of the great novels of post-World War II Britain. His novels also seem to be
portraits of a nation in steep decline, falling so low, it no longer has control
over its own foreign policy and, hence, its fate.
Another
le Carré theme is the dilemmas faced by good guys when they become ensnared in
bad deeds on behalf of the institutions whose values they loyally serve, even
when those values are betrayed.
A Delicate Truth, le Carré’s twenty-first title,
returns to that theme. It opens from the enigmatic point of view of a nameless veteran
official in the British Foreign Office who, dressed in a second-hand alias fitted
by his superiors, is sent as a behind-the-lines observer on a mission to capture
a suspected jihadist said to be hiding out on the island of Gibraltar.
The
mission, as far as he can see from watching via a bank of fuzzy video monitors,
looks to be a success. The diplomat, whose real name is Christopher “Kit”
Probyn, is rewarded a sinecure post in the Caribbean and retires with a
knighthood, confident that he did right by King and Country.
At the
same time, another side player in this game, Toby Bell, a private secretary to
Minister Fergus Quinn, supposedly the raid’s architect, is wondering exactly
what his boss has been up to. Despite Toby’s official relationship his boss, Quinn
and his allies do not trust Toby’s blend of easygoing liberality and integrity,
and so they excise him from their inner loop, leaving him a puzzled spectator.
Gnawed
ratty with suspicion, Toby cleverly records an ultra-secret meeting between
Quinn and the raid’s commandos. From there, he nudges about, trying to share
his information. But he’s ignored and then finally warned off by his Foreign
Office mentor, Giles Oakley. After the raid, he’s abruptly shunted to a faraway
post in a faraway corner of the globe, where, those in power suppose, his
suspicions will do no harm.
Three
years later, Kit is visited by Jeb, one of the commandos Toby recorded on his
secret tape along with Kit, as it turns out. Jeb’s conscience is eating him to
death. He tells Kit that he saw nothing of what really happened that night: the
raid did not go off as promised and, in fact, led to an ugly, if unsurprising,
tragedy.
Kit,
with his pleasing old-style Englishman’s sense of honor and human decency, is
staggered by this revelation of his culpability. He reaches out to Toby for
help in uncovering the ugly truth of what happened that night and seeing that
justice is done.
I don’t
think this le Carre’s best book, but it’s still very good, in how its plot and story
twist and wind about. It end with an extremely taut and hair-raising climax, as
the cover-up unwinds at the same time that dark forces wind in around Toby and
Kit.
The
prose is finely sinuous as ever, but the author sometimes seems too determined
to hammer home his dismay about the current conduct of the so-called War on
Terror. A Delicate Truth hectors more
than I like and feels a little too “ripped from today’s headlines.” (Full
disclosure: I don’t like overly “messagy” prose, regardless of whether I agree
with its sentiments or not. It’s fine for characters to have opinions, but a
third-person narrator should be circumspect. Once an author starts shaking his
own finger in my face I . . . well, I sometimes get peckish.)
Also,
as awful as the crime that hides within A
Delicate Truth’s is, it feels dwarfed by the real events of the last twelve
years. It feels like more of a footnote than a symbol of something larger. While
reading, I thought about the many pages of nonfiction out there that would do a
better job in facing the same issues probed here.
For
example, if we had also seen events as they happened at the other end of the
gun barrel, the novel might have been more effective.
At its
best, A Delicate Truth portrays our queasiness
at being trapped between a realistic fear of jihadist war and an equally plausible
fear we should feel about those we’re supposed to look to for protection.
Le Carré,
the ex-British spy, has been out of the actual espionage business for fifty
years now and much about spying has changed. But reading his books, I’m still left
with a sense of how things really work in the world of espionage and fading
empires.
Copyright 2012 by Thomas
Burchfield
Photo by author
Thomas Burchfield has just completed BUTCHERTOWN , a 1920s gangster shoot-'em-up. He can be “friended” on Facebook and tweeted at on Twitter. You can also join his e-mail list via tbdeluxe [at] sbcglobal [dot] net. He lives in Northern California with his wife, Elizabeth.
4 comments:
Interesting, esp. what you say of LeCarre's treatment of moral dilemmas, and the last 12 years.
Thanks, Anon. Thinking on it more, I wonder if the novel might have been more powerful if le Carre had also gone into the point of view of the people at the very center of the raid.
Fantastic!
Thank you!
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