John le Carre was born in 1931 and attended the universities of Bern and Oxford. He taught at Eton and served briefly in British Intelligence during the Cold War. For the last fifty years he has lived by his pen. He divides his time between London and Cornwall.
From the Hardcover edition.
One of the NP99: National Post's best books of 2016
"Recounted with the storytelling elan of a master raconteur -- by
turns dramatic and funny, charming, tart and melancholy." --Michiko
Kakutani, The New York Times
"An illuminating, self-effacing and pleasurable inquiry into le
Carre's creative process, offering globe-spanning thrills of a
different, but no less captivating kind than those associated with
the novels." --USA Today
"[Le Carre] is a polished raconteur, with an actor's protean
self-presentation, gifts of pace and timing, aptitude for entrances
and exits." --Wall Street Journal
"This incisive and witty memoir, by the man who long ago set the
gold standard for modern espionage novelists, is a glittering
treasure chest of great stories." --The Seattle Times, "The Best
Books of 2016"
"The name 'John le Carre' attracts the audience, but it's David
Cornwell confiding in us here, as if over dinner, then chatting
long into the evening over snifters of brandy, or, as he unspools
memories of Russia, glasses of vodka." --Associated Press
"The Pigeon Tunnel contains what le Carre calls 'tiny bits of
history caught in flagrante, ' all of them borrowed from the lived
experience of a novelist whose career has more closely resembled
that of a war correspondent than a literary celebrity....Spies are
le Carre's preferred subject, but through them he grapples with
larger human truths that transcend the cloak-and-dagger
underworld." --The American Scholar
"Looking back on a life rich enough to spawn multiple
globe-spanning novels...le Carre showcases his grand, cinematic
sense of place and...the ineffable quality that defines a
professional raconteur....The inviting, drinks-beside-the-fire
style from a master of the craft never overtakes the details of le
Carre's remarkable life or his strong insider's opinions on issues
of geopolitical import since World War II." --Library Journal,
starred review
"Always insightful, frequently charming, and sometimes sobering,
the memorable tales told by master storyteller le Carre about his
life will surely delight both longtime fans and newcomers."
--Publishers Weekly
"For all the cinematic glamour of le Carre's experiences,
reflections on the workaday realities of fiction writing may
provide the most engaging aspect of this colorful valediction. A
satisfying recollection of a literary life well-lived." --Kirkus
Reviews
Praise for A Delicate Truth
"At the moment a new generation is stumbling upon his work, le
Carre is still writing at something close to the top of his game. .
. . [He] has not lost his ability to sketch, in a line or two, an
entire character." --Dwight Garner, The New York Times Magazine
"The narrative dominoes fall with masterly precision. . . . As
ever, le Carre's prose is fluid, carrying the reader toward an
inevitable yet nail-biting climax." --Olen Steinhauer, The New York
Times Book Review (front page)
"Timelier than ever." --The New York Times
"Well-wrought . . . A sharply sketched gallery of characters."--The
Wall Street Journal
"Le Carre is fiercely modern. . . . a confluence of styles, voices,
approaches . . . A novel that beckons us beyond any and all
expectations."--The Washington Post
"Gorgeous writing. It's sophisticated storytelling at its very
best." --USA Today
"Le Carre is...at full power with a book that draws on a career's
worth of literary skill and international analysis. No other writer
has charted--pitilessly for politicians but thrillingly for
readers--the public and secret histories of his times." --The
Guardian (UK)
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