The first of
Brian Freemantle’s books about British intelligence agent Charlie Muffin was a
contemporary spy novel at the time it was published in 1977 but today it is
definitely a historical thriller. The Berlin Wall was still standing when the
book was written and that’s where it opens. Charlie and two of his younger,
greatly despised colleagues are planning to enter the border crossing to the
West after completing their assignment in Communist East Germany. Charlie’s
department considers him a relic of the past with no current useful purpose.
They have furtively arranged to have him arrested at the Wall, thereby ridding
themselves of an embarrassment to their agency. However, Charlie has not
survived twenty-five years of danger by accident. In fulfillment of the adage
“Old age and treachery will always beat youth and exuberance”, he recognizes
their skullduggery and smoothly circumvents it.
After that
bold attempt to erase him, Charlie has no illusions about the hostility of his
workplace but he continues to do his job, convinced he can’t afford to retire.
British Intelligence recently captured a major Russian player and, gloating
over their success, decided to go after another significant figure. Bringing in
General Valery Kalenin of the KGB would be an astonishing coup, one that would
restore the reputation of British Intelligence in the world, much needed after
the scandals of the Cambridge Five and Profumo. They need Charlie’s help to do
it, though.
An excellent
look back at Cold War spycraft in all its paranoid and cutthroat detail. A
reminder of the alliances and the hostilities that formed quickly and just as
quickly shifted into something else. The competitiveness of the various
intelligence agencies, even those theoretically on the same side, is
illustrated too with the CIA anxious to take some of the credit for the British
efforts.
Charlie
Muffin is an inspired creation, a working class donkey among the Oxbridge
racehorses around him, but still head and shoulders above them in the tricks of
their mutual trade. Charlie’s debut seems originally meant to be a stand-alone
as the plot threads are tied up at the end. But fifteen books follow this first
one with the last issued in 2013, so Freemantle found a way to untie them.
Readers of John LeCarre and spy thrillers will relish these stories, as will
anyone who enjoys robust senior protagonists who believe in getting even
instead of getting mad.
·
Publisher: Jonathan Cape; First
Edition (January 1, 1977)
·
Language: English
·
Hardcover: 192 pages
·
ISBN-10: 0224013122
·
ISBN-13: 978-0224013123
Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4aiQQq5
Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2024
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.
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