mark monday's Reviews > Call for the Dead

Call for the Dead by John le Carré
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bookshelves: blood-and-danger, murdertime

never a fun author but always a deep one, John le Carré. a pensive, carefully controlled writer and a deceptively placid novel: the perfect ingredients for the start of what will become a classic series. one that will take the thrill out of 'spy thriller' and which will explore previously unmined depths within the genre. we meet George Smiley and gradually become impressed by this seemingly dull, lumpish, rather vague man. we appreciate his dry insights, his dislike of the pompous and the showy, his sardonic outlook on the systems around him, that almost control him. almost, but not quite, not fully; and not fully means he is, at heart, unable to be controlled. his empathy slowly becomes clear: an empathy that defines him, that is key to what makes him strong, and that is also his greatest weakness. this is not only a novel of spies and espionage, it is also a murder mystery. sadly for George, empathy is perhaps not the most helpful attribute when it comes to solving a murder.
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Reading Progress

July 4, 2024 – Started Reading
July 4, 2024 – Shelved
July 9, 2024 – Shelved as: blood-and-danger
July 9, 2024 – Shelved as: murdertime
July 9, 2024 – Finished Reading

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