The human factor

Graham Greene, 1904-1991

Book - 2008

Maurice Castle is a high-level operative of the British Secret Service during the Cold War era. Deeply in love with his African wife, Castle decides with misgivings to act as a double agent to help his in-laws in South Africa. Eventually Castle begins passing information to the Soviets. In order to evade detection, he allows his assistant to be wrongly identified as the source of the leaks. But when suspicions remain, Castle is forced to make an even more excruciating sacrifice to save himself.

Saved in:

1st Floor Show me where

FICTION/Greene, Graham
1 / 2 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
1st Floor FICTION/Greene, Graham Checked In
1st Floor FICTION/Greene, Graham Due Nov 26, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Novels
Psychological fiction
Spy fiction
Fiction
Spy stories
Published
New York : Penguin Books 2008.
Language
English
Main Author
Graham Greene, 1904-1991 (-)
Physical Description
xv, 268 pages ; 20 cm
ISBN
9780143105565
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A man in love walks through the world like an anarchist, carrying a time bomb."" ""As long as we are alive we'll come together again. Somehow. Somewhere."" Only Graham Greene could get. away with lines like that--by creating the gentlest, most civilly persecuted of all his men-on-the-run, a bicycle-riding, dog-walking commuter whose heroics are so understated that images of passion and violence take on fresh, half-ironic validity. This ""man in love"" is Castle, a veteran agent-turned-deskman (African division) for British Intelligence. A quietly ardent husband to black wife Sarah. A quietly doting father to black son Sam (although, or because, he's not Sam's real father). A kind, aging fellow. And--as we learn only after Greene has made us at home with Castle--a spy. Grateful to the Communist agent who helped Sarah and Sam escape from South Africa and himself a scarred enemy of apartheid, Castle has been leaking information, via coded Tolstoy and Trollope, to Moscow, piddling stuff mostly. But now, just as his superiors start to suspect him (they've ""eliminated"" Castle's young colleague by mistake), the ""Uncle Remus"" operation passes across Castle's desk--an Anglo-American-German plan to ensure the stability of South Africa's white regime. Should Castle risk this one last leak even as his former friends at ""the firm"" obliquely, inevitably close in on him? Greene, of course, builds suspense, cinematically, like nobody else in the business, but that is only a fringe benefit when the world's most gracefully gifted and practiced storyteller is operating at full power. Scene after scene--a stiflingly chic Chelsea wedding party, an attempt at nightlife camaraderie among fellow spies, a priest's refusal to hear non-Catholic Castle's confession--snakes by with acerbic energy; character after character darts up with surprise pockets of vulnerability. But this book is ultimately all Castle's, for Greene has returned, in part, to his earliest style, has pared down his moral patterns to the barest essential, has abandoned his penchants for exotica and skirmishes. What remains is a story as apparently plain as Greene's perfect prose--an open-hearted, tight-lipped pavane of conscience and sentiment that can be watched and enjoyed for all the wrong, and all the right, reasons. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.