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review 2016-07-01 16:41
Well, you can't say it's not informative
John le Carre: The Biography - Adam Sisman

If the goal of a biography is to both inform the reader about their subject (in this case an author) and encourage them to read their subject's entire body of works then John le Carré: The Biography by Adam Sisman accomplished that goal. If you're looking for a fast-paced thrill ride then you're paging up the wrong book (did I take that metaphor too far?). Firstly, this is one of those weird occasions where the biographer's subject is still living. (I just checked and the last biography I read was I Am Scout back in May 2014 and it was also about a living (at the time) subject.) It is abundantly obvious that Sisman did his homework which is due in large part because he had the cooperation of the man himself. I must first inform you that John le Carré is not the author's true name. He is actually David Cornwell, an Englishman and former member of MI5 and MI6. (This isn't a spoiler as apparently it's a well-known fact and I'm just slow on the uptake.) A large part of Cornwell's life had been shrouded in mystery because of his prior career but in truth it was just a minor aspect of what made him into the author that he has become. Sisman explores at length Cornwell's family life and his upbringing and how that came to mold his character (and the characters in his novels). In particular, David's relationship with his father is harked upon multiple times in both Sisman's biography and in the works of le Carré. Honestly, a chronological timeline of all of Ronnie's movements wouldn't have gone amiss as that man was all over the place. I found the pacing of this book extremely slow and I felt it necessary to take frequent breaks so that I wasn't bogged down by the facts (it felt at times like I was being set up for a quiz on dates which I always fail). My overall feeling was that the book was very dry and as a result I didn't enjoy it nearly as much as I had hoped I would. :-/ However, it served the purpose of instructing me on the topic of the author known as John le Carré so there's that. So I guess I'll give it a solid 4/10 because I did find it somewhat disappointing.

 

I'm definitely going to check out more of John le Carré's books though. In fact, I have a copy of Smiley's People that's been lurking for entirely too long on my shelves...

Source: readingfortheheckofit.blogspot.com
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review 2015-10-23 22:28
John le Carre: The Biography by Adam Sisman
John le Carre: The Biography - Adam Sisman
bookshelves: autumn-2015, biography, nonfiction, published-2015, radio-4
Recommended for: BBC Radio Listeners
Read from October 15 to 23, 2015

 

BOTW

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b06j13r5

Description: John le Carré is still at the top, more than half a century after The Spy Who Came in from the Cold became a worldwide bestseller. From his bleak childhood - the departure of his mother when he was five was followed by 'sixteen hugless years' in the dubious care of his father, a serial-seducer and con-man - through recruitment by both MI5 and MI6, to his emergence as the master of the espionage novel, le Carré has repeatedly quarried his life for his fiction. Millions of readers are hungry to know the truth about him. Written with exclusive access to le Carre himself, to his private archive and to many of the people closest to him, this is a major biography of one of the most important novelists alive today.

1/5: Born David Cornwell, le Carré's life was in thrall to his remarkable father Ronnie.

2/5: School, then Bern to study, and meeting mysterious Kraemer

3/5: Oxford, then teaching at Eton, employment at MI5 and publication

4/5: Le Carré hits the height of fame, meets Graham Greene, and tackles his most famous book.

5/5: From The Constant Gardener in the 1990's to the present day, and the
author is still very much at work - "I find it very difficult to read my own stuff, but I look at it with satisfaction.."
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