![]() Cover for the Victor Gollancz first edition | |
| Author | John le Carré |
|---|---|
| Language | English |
| Series | George Smiley |
| Genre | Spy novel |
| Published | September 1963 |
| Publisher | Victor Gollancz |
| Publication place | United Kingdom |
| Media type | Print (hardback & paperback) |
| Pages | 240 pages |
| ISBN | 0-575-00149-6 |
| Preceded by | A Murder of Quality |
| Followed by | The Looking Glass War |
The Spy Who Came in from the Cold is a 1963 Cold Warspy novel by the British authorJohn le Carré. It depicts Alec Leamas, aBritish intelligence officer, being sent toEast Germany as a fauxdefector to sow disinformation about a powerful East German intelligence officer. It serves as a sequel to le Carré's previous novelsCall for the Dead andA Murder of Quality, which also featured the fictitious British intelligence organisation, "The Circus", and its agentsGeorge Smiley andPeter Guillam.
The Spy Who Came in from the Cold portrays Western espionage methods as morally inconsistent withWestern democracy and values. The novel received critical acclaim at the time of its publication and became an international best-seller; it was selected as one of theAll-Time 100 Novels byTime magazine.[1]
In 1965,Martin Ritt directed acinematic adaptation, withRichard Burton as Leamas. Characters and events fromThe Spy Who Came in from the Cold are revisited inA Legacy of Spies, le Carré's 2017 novel centering on an ageing Guillam.
The Spy Who Came in from the Cold occurs during the heightened tensions that characterised the late 1950s and early 1960sCold War, when aWarsaw Pact–NATO war sparked inGermany seemed likely. The story begins and concludes inBerlin, about a year after the completion of theBerlin Wall and around the time when double-agentHeinz Felfe was exposed and tried.[2]
Le Carré's debut novel,Call for the Dead, introduced the charactersGeorge Smiley and Hans-Dieter Mundt. In that story, Smiley investigates the suicide of Samuel Fennan. He quickly establishes a link between theEast German Secret Service and the deceased, and learns that Mundt, an assassin, killed the man after a misunderstanding between Fennan and their controller, Dieter Frey. Mundt escaped from England shortly after, getting back intoEast Germany before Smiley and Guillam could catch him.The Spy Who Came in from the Cold picks up two years later, where Mundt has had a somewhat meteoric rise to become the head of the Abteilung, because of his success withcounter-intelligence operations against British networks, as well as a member of the Presidium of theSocialist Unity Party.
Le Carré said that the inspiration for the character of Leamas came from a "Peter Finch-like figure in a raincoat" whom he remembered seeing pull out a wad of foreign currencies at London Airport, demanding a large Scotch; an "archetypal secret agent figure – exhausted, barely knows what country he's in, much-travelled, down on his luck."[3]
In 1979, Dutch writerWillem Frederik Hermans claimed thatThe Spy Who Came in from the Cold plagiarised his novelThe Darkroom of Damocles, which had been published a year earlier. In 1985, Le Carré agreed thatThe Darkroom of Damocles was one of his influences, though getting the name of both the book and the author wrong in saying that his influences included: "some Dutch writer with a book calledThe Room of Damocles. His name is Verhulst or Van Hulst.".[4]
During the Cold War, Alec Leamas, a formerSOE operative who fought in theNetherlands andNorway,[5] runs a sizeable East German intelligence ring through his posting as Station Head of Berlin Station. Hans-Dieter Mundt, a former low levelAbteilung officer who murderedSamuel Fennan a few years prior, has risen to power in thecounterintelligence section and systematically eradicates the network. Leamas attempts to save Karl Riemeck, his final undercover source and member of thepraesidium of theSocialist Unity Party, but fails, witnessing his death as he attempts to cross intoWest Germany. With his network destroyed, Leamas returns to London and visits the Circus' elusive chief,Control, to sanction his return "from the cold" and retirement. Instead, Control requests he stay in play for one final operation; a simulated defection to East Germany to frame Mundt as adouble agent. Control explains that Mundt's deputy, Jens Fiedler, suspects his superior may be a turncoat for western intelligence services and could tip the balance in favour of ousting Mundt from power. In exchange for his success, Leamas will retain anything he makes on the mission, a pension pot, and will receive official sanction to retire from the Service.
In order to attract the attention of East German intelligence, Control organises Leamas' demotion to the finance department. Leamas begins to show signs ofalcoholism and is eventually dismissed forfraudulent activity with Circus accounts. Leamas is forced onto thedole, lives in a substandard flat, and eventually starts working in a run-down library around localCPGB secretary Liz Gold. Leamas and Gold gradually strike up a friendship and eventually become lovers. After a period of illness reveals the extent of Liz's feelings for him, Leamas confesses he will soon be forced to say goodbye and she must not look for him. A few days later, he says goodbye, and takes the "final plunge" into Control's plan, getting arrested for assault and sentenced to three months in prison. Before fully involving himself in the scheme, however, he forces Control to promise to keep Liz out of the Circus' plans.
Following his release, Leamas is approached by a recruiter who claims to know him from Berlin. He lets Leamas stay at his home, before introducing him to a contact who takes Leamas to the Netherlands on aforged passport. There, an Abteilung agent interrogates Leamas at a safe house before smuggling him into East Germany. Leamas is gradually exposed to more senior officials within the Abteilung, during which he drops hints about ongoing payments to a double agent. In Britain, Liz is suddenly visited by a-now-retired George Smiley, who tells her to come to him should she need anything, inquires about her relationship with Leamas, and pays off the outstanding rent on Leamas' flat.
After rigorous interrogations, Leamas is moved to an isolated property and held under guard, where he is finally introduced to Jens Fiedler. His days consist largely of extended interviewing about his previous Circus work while hiking alongside Fiedler or a guard. In their time together, both men end up regularly debating the philosophical distinctions between Leamas'pragmatism and Fiedler'sidealism of life in the DDR. Through these debates, Leamas interprets Fiedler to be inherently concerned about the righteousness of his actions and their impacts on the country. In contrast, Mundt is portrayed by Fiedler as an opportunistic mercenary who abandoned theNazis and 'became' a Communist out of self-preservation. As the pair get closer, Fiedler also conveys his fears about Mundt's long standinganti-semitism affecting him, a Jewish man. Near the end of Fiedler's interrogations, the power struggle in the Abteilung escalates when Mundt abruptly arrests Fiedler and Leamas. In the panic Leamas inadvertently kills an East German guard, and awakes in Mundt's facility, where Mundt interrogates and tortures both men. It is then revealed, however, that Fiedler had also submitted an arrest warrant for Mundt, leading the East German régime to intervene and convene a court. Fiedler and Mundt are both released, and then summoned to present their cases to a tribunal convenedin camera. During the trial, Leamas further elaborates on previous mentions of undercover payments to a foreign agent in bank accounts which match locations that Mundt had travelled to, while Fiedler presents other evidence implicating Mundt to be a British agent.
While Leamas is away, Liz receives an invitation from the East Germans to participate in an exchange of party members with the British Communist Party. Surprisingly, she is summoned by Mundt's attorney as a witness and forced to testify at the tribunal. She then admits Smiley paid the apartment lease, and that Smiley offered help should she need it. She also confesses that Leamas made her promise not to look for him, and that he said goodbye immediately before he assaulted the grocer. Leamas, realising his cover has been blown, offers to tell them about the mission in exchange for Liz's freedom, but realises the true nature of the scheme during the course of the tribunal. Fiedler is then arrested at the tribunal's end.
Immediately after the trial, Mundt subtly locates and then releases Leamas and Liz from jail, and gives them a car to get from their current location to the Berlin Wall. During the drive, Leamas explains the entire situation to a bemused Liz. Mundt is actually a British double agent, who reports to Smiley, who is actually undercover in the mission and pretending to be retired. Mundt was turned against the East Germans before he returned following the murder of Samuel Fennan a few years earlier, and the mission's true target was Fiedler, who was closing on exposing Mundt as a double agent. On account of Leamas’ and Liz's intimate relationship, however, Mundt (and Smiley) were provided with the means of discrediting Leamas' ability to provide evidence to the tribunal, and as such discredit Fiedler. Liz, however, is shaken, and realises that her actions have enabled the Circus to protect their asset Mundt at the expense of the thoughtful and idealistic Fiedler. When asked what will become of Fiedler, Leamas replies that he will be shot.
Although disgusted, Liz overcomes this on account of her love for Leamas. The two drive to the Berlin wall, and make a break for West Germany by ascending the wall and through a section of sabotaged barbed wire atop the wall. Leamas reaches the top, but as he reaches down to help Liz, she is shot and killed by one of Mundt's operatives. She falls back down, and as Smiley calls to Leamas from the other side of the wall, he hesitates, before eventually descending the wall on the East German side, where he is also shot and killed.
At its publication during theCold War, the moral presentation ofThe Spy Who Came in from the Cold rendered it a revolutionaryespionage novel by showing the intelligence services of both the Eastern and Western nations as engaging in the same expedient amorality in the name of national security. Le Carré also presents his western spy as morally burnt-out.
The espionage world of Alec Leamas portrays love as a three-dimensional emotion that can have disastrous consequences for those involved. Good does not always vanquish evil in Leamas's world, a defeatist attitude that was criticised inThe Times.[6][7]
According toJon Stock, writing inThe Daily Telegraph: "The plot ofThe Spy Who Came in from the Cold is assembled with more precision than a Swiss watch. The heartless way in which Alec Leamas is manipulated; Control's ruthless playing of Mundt and Fiedler; and of course the dramatic ending on the Berlin Wall, immortalised in the film starringRichard Burton. My favourite le Carré, it gets better with each re-read."[8]
In 1965,Martin Ritt directed thefilm adaptation, withRichard Burton as Leamas,Oskar Werner as Fiedler, andClaire Bloom as Nan Perry, a renaming of the character of Liz Gold.
In 2016,Paramount Television and The Ink Factory – who produced television adaptations of Le Carré'sThe Night Manager – announced that they were developing a limited series based onThe Spy Who Came in from the Cold, withSimon Beaufoy as the writer.[9] On 14 January 2017,AMC and theBBC joined with The Ink Factory for the series.[10]
In 2024,David Eldridge wrote a theatrical adaptation of the novel which played in the Minerva Theatre atChichester Festival Theatre, running from 23 August to 21 September 2024. It starredRory Keenan as Alec Leamas,Agnes O'Casey as Liz Gold andJohn Ramm as George Smiley, directed byJeremy Herrin.[11] In a mostly positive review forThe Times Literary Supplement, theatre critic Jim Keaveney notes that the role of Smiley is significantly "recast" in Eldridge's version: "Smiley does not fulfil the peripheral role le Carré provided for him. Instead he is central to the intrigue."[12]
A Legacy of Spies, le Carré's 2017 novel, recounts the backstory toThe Spy Who Came in From the Cold within a modern-day frame story told from the point of view ofPeter Guillam.
Karla's Choice, a 2024 Le Carrécontinuation novel byNick Harkaway, the son of le Carré, takes place not long after that ofThe Spy Who Came in from the Cold. Harkaway re-creates several of the original book's main characters, especially George Smiley, in the context of le Carré's later novels. Harkaway's book takes as one of its themes the various characters' recriminations over Leamas's death.
Le Carré's book won a 1963Gold Dagger award from theCrime Writers' Association for "Best Crime Novel". Two years later the US edition was awarded theEdgar Award from theMystery Writers of America for "Best Mystery Novel". It was the first work to win the award for "Best Novel" from both mystery writing organisations. ScreenwritersPaul Dehn andGuy Trosper, who adapted the book for the 1965movie, received an Edgar the following year for "Best Motion Picture Screenplay" for an American movie.
In 1990, theCrime Writers' Association ranked the novel third in their listThe Top 100 Crime Novels of All Time. Five years later in a similar list byMystery Writers of America the novel was ranked sixth.Time magazine, while includingThe Spy Who Came in from the Cold in its top 100 novels list,[1] stated that the novel was "a sad, sympathetic portrait of a man who has lived by lies and subterfuge for so long, he's forgotten how to tell the truth."[13]
In 2005, the fiftieth anniversary of the Dagger Awards,The Spy Who Came in from the Cold was awarded theDagger of Daggers, a one-time award given to the Golden Dagger winner regarded as the stand-out among all fifty winners over the history of the Crime Writers' Association.[14]
The book also headed thePublishers Weekly's list of 15 top spy novels in 2006.[15]
"I have the impression that he [Le Carré] based his Spy largely on my book", said Hermans, whose novel tells the story of a man who carries out dangerous missions with British agents during the German occupation of the Netherlands.