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Our Man in Havana - Community Reviews back

by Graham Greene, Christopher Hitchens
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Themis-Athena's Garden of Books
Themis-Athena's Garden of Books rated it 6 years ago
Memorial Day Weekend -- Labor Day 2018 The Books: Fiction Eric Ambler: The Mask of Dimitrios (new / print) **** Phyllis Bottome: The Lifeline (new / ebook-to-printed-PDF) ***1/2 John le Carré: The Tailor of Panama (revisited on audio, narrated by the author) ****1/2 Agatha Christie: N or M? (revis...
Abandoned by user
Abandoned by user rated it 7 years ago
Graham Greene is one of those authors that I've always meant to read - and following along with BrokenTune's Greene-land Adventures project increased my desire to dip into his books. The Summer of Spies gave me a perfect opportunity to check out one of his "espionage" books. I wasn't expecting the...
Lagraziana's Kalliopeion
Lagraziana's Kalliopeion rated it 9 years ago
Cuba in the 1950s was such a strategically important place that espionage bloomed there and in the satirical spy novel Our Man in Havana by Graham Greene the general desire for first-hand intelligence has strange offshoots. One day Jim Wormold, the agent of Phastkleaners vacuum cleaners in Havana,...
Jenny's Book Bag
Jenny's Book Bag rated it 10 years ago
I'm not familiar with satire or spy novels, but I still got a lot of enjoyment out of this.
Jenny's Book Bag
Jenny's Book Bag rated it 10 years ago
I'm not familiar with satire or spy novels, but I still got a lot of enjoyment out of this.
Edward
Edward rated it 11 years ago
Introduction--Our Man in Havana
Lisa (Harmony)
Lisa (Harmony) rated it 11 years ago
In a lot of ways this is a brilliant book--or at least brilliantly written, but this first book I've read by Graham Greene also left me feeling it would be my last--thus the less than five star rating since I can't honestly say this hit things out of the park for me. The book was published in 1958 a...
BrokenTune
BrokenTune rated it 11 years ago
Oh, I do like a spy novel! And this is one with a twist - because it is a satire on the well known intelligent services and the methods they are willing to employ to obtain information. Set in Cuba at the time of the missile crisis, Greene tells the story of James Wormold, a vacuum cleaner salesma...
Meandering Em's
Meandering Em's rated it 12 years ago
I have read only one other Graham Greene novel which covered a serious topic seriously. So I was surprised to find this book to be a comedic look at spying and spy organizations. However, after reading it, I'm curious to know if these types of shenanigans actually occur. Mr. Wormold, a seller of ...
Telynor's Library, and then some
Telynor's Library, and then some rated it 13 years ago
A very entertaining novel about Cuba just before Castro's revolution. Wormold, a nobody expatriate, finds himself neck deep in spies and trouble when approached by the British government. A short novel, with plenty of sarcasm and satire, and worth it. A film adaptation was made as well. There's also...
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