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Showing posts with label Thomas Kell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thomas Kell. Show all posts
Friday, 19 June 2020
A Divided Spy - Charles Cumming
I've said it before and I'll say it again. Charles Cumming is the new British master of spy fiction. He is comparable with le Carre and Deighton. His range is wider than the former, his writing slightly more refined than the latter. Both octogenarian masters are brilliant constructors of plot and Cumming is near as dammit their equal.
A Divided Spy is the third Thomas Kell novel. It has a sense of ending about it but I am hoping it is just the third of a sub-trilogy within a longer series. It ties up storylines from A Foreign Country and A Colder War (both, of course, reviewed on this blog) and introduces a discrete, highly contemporary story about Islamist terror strikes on UK soil.
What more can I say? It is brilliant, thrilling, a masterpiece of its genre, compulsory reading for aficionados.
Wednesday, 13 January 2016
A Colder War - Charles Cumming
Cumming first came to prominence with A Foreign Country, which won the CWA Ian Fleming Steel Dagger for best thriller of the year and the Bloody Scotland crime book of the year, both in 2012. The protagonist of that book, the forty-something disgraced SIS operative Thomas Kell, returns in A Colder War.
The premise is similar. Still under investigation for his role in unlawful rendition and torture Kell is called back to action by the misfortune of an old friend and colleague, in this instance Paul Wallinger, chief British spy in Ankara, is killed in a dubious flying 'accident' immediately after a high profile operation he was running with the Americans goes spectacularly tits-up.
It's a mole-hunt with the personal undertones - Kell becomes passionately involved with Wallinger's daughter, and she becomes unexpectedly involved with the mole-hunt. We know who the mole is fairly early in proceedings but Cumming is nevertheless able to maintain the suspense levels to the very end. He has, in many ways, taken up the spy world where John le Carre left it. Kell is not entirely dissimilar to George Smiley, though he does have a much more active personal life. Cumming is now a major player in the genre. I look forward to Kell's next appearance. In the meantime I must try one of Cumming's standalone novels, perhaps the first, A Spy by Nature.
The premise is similar. Still under investigation for his role in unlawful rendition and torture Kell is called back to action by the misfortune of an old friend and colleague, in this instance Paul Wallinger, chief British spy in Ankara, is killed in a dubious flying 'accident' immediately after a high profile operation he was running with the Americans goes spectacularly tits-up.
It's a mole-hunt with the personal undertones - Kell becomes passionately involved with Wallinger's daughter, and she becomes unexpectedly involved with the mole-hunt. We know who the mole is fairly early in proceedings but Cumming is nevertheless able to maintain the suspense levels to the very end. He has, in many ways, taken up the spy world where John le Carre left it. Kell is not entirely dissimilar to George Smiley, though he does have a much more active personal life. Cumming is now a major player in the genre. I look forward to Kell's next appearance. In the meantime I must try one of Cumming's standalone novels, perhaps the first, A Spy by Nature.
Saturday, 20 September 2014
A Foreign Country - Charles Cumming
I've been keeping an eye out for Cumming's work since he won the CWA Steel Dagger, and the Bloody Scotland Scottish Crime Book of the Year for this very novel in 2012.
As I have stated several times on this blog, spy fiction is not my first choice and I can only tolerate the very best. Fortunately, Cumming is up there with the very best. Much more literate than Fleming and not as tendentious as le Carre can sometimes be.
The storyline here is unrolled through a number of clever twists, none of which strain the credulity. Essentially, it is this: the incoming female head of MI6 vanishes; Thomas Kell, the spy who was effectively thrown into the cold, is given the off-the-books task of tracking her down with the vague promise of reinstatement if successful. This means we don't have to endure too much office in-fighting and can get down to the chase through Tunisia and France.
The plot deepens, the target changes more than once, and the pace never once relents. Cumming has stripped down the backstory of his characters to the bare minimum needed to engage our empathy. Thus he can devote all his authorial energy to making his thriller thrilling. He succeeds.
I am definitely up for more. The Trinity Six sounds intriguing...
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