Part One
Part Two
Part Three
Part Four
Part Five
--Espionage Noir--
Novels of espionage aren’t always of the James Bond variety. In the post-war years and throughout the Cold War, several great writers of spy stories emerged and made their very distinctive marks on the hardboiled/noir school. Many of them were British, but it wasn’t long before the Americans got into the game as well. Here are some of the best espionage noir writers of the last seventy years:
Graham Greene’s high tension stories were excellent examples of international noir, filled with intrigue, double-crossing, and central characters in way over their heads.
Orient Express
This Gun for Hire
Confidential Agent
Ministry of Fear
The Third Man
Our Man in Havana
Eric Ambler’s work was atmospheric and tense, with protagonists that would find themselves unwittingly involved in events bigger than themselves, and struggling to get free—or at least figure out what the hell was going on.
Epitaph For a Spy
A Coffin for Dimitrios
Cause for Alarm
Journey Into Fear
Geoffrey Household wrote what is now considered the classic man-on-the-run story.
Rogue Male
John le Carre. Some readers and critics consider him as perhaps the greatest espionage novelist of all time (debatable). But le Carre did indeed write bold, cynical and compelling stories that rang with an authenticity lacking in Fleming’s work. The George Smiley cycle of novels is well worth reading, but le Carre's greatest novel is this stand-alone...
The Spy Who Came in from the Cold
Adam Hall straddled the line between the stark realism of le Carre and the outrageous adventure of Fleming. His novels about British secret agent Quiller are fast-paced, cynical in the best noir tradition, and wildly unpredictable.
The Quiller Memorandum
The Ninth Directive
The Striker Portfolio
The Warsaw Document
The Tango Briefing
The Mandarin Cypher
The Sinkiang Executive
Len Deighton has been called the “anti-Fleming”, because his protagonists are so diametrically opposed to Bond. The nameless narrator of Deighton’s earliest thrillers (called ‘Harry Palmer’ in the film adaptations) is a bitter, burnt-out ex-criminal forced into working for the British government. Terrific international noir.
The Ipcress File
Funeral in Berlin
The Billion Dollar Brain
Donald Hamilton. Forget the goofy movies with Dean Martin; the Matt Helm series of espionage novels were top-notch, exciting and remarkably well-written.
Death of a Citizen
The Wrecking Crew
The Removers
The Silencers
Murderer’s Row
Edward S. Aarons wrote straight noir crime stories in the early ‘50’s before turning his attention to espionage with the classic “Assignment” series featuring Cajun secret agent Sam Durrell. Highly believable, action-packed. Here are just a handful:
Assignment to Disaster
Assignment: Suicide
Assignment: Treason
Assignment: Stella Marni
Alan Furst is every bit in the best tradition of Graham Greene and Eric Ambler, writing moody and evocative spy stories invariably set against the backdrop of WWII-era Europe. Beautifully written, fog-shrouded, and as purely noir as anything going today.
Night Soldiers
Dark Star
The World at Night
Dark Voyage
Red Gold
Kingdom of Shadows
The Polish Officer
Spies of Warsaw
Spies of the Balkans
Furst is a modern writer, which leads us very nicely into the world of modern noir… next time.
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This looks like a list of my husband's favorite novels. I have read quite a few though. I have Death of a Citizen sitting right here. Someone stuck it in my mailbox at work. Never did find out who.
ReplyDeleteThis is another great list. Obviously have my Le Carre, Greene and Amblers, but must admit that the movies put me off getting the Matt Helm stuff.
ReplyDeleteMust give them another look.
Love the Deighton cover. Have you seen the Michael Caine films of the books?
ReplyDelete