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The Writer and the Traitor: A thrilling history of the 20th century's most intriguing friendship - between novelist Graham Greene and spy Kim Philby

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'A wholly fascinating account of an extraordinary friendship. Robert Verkaik's nuanced and insightful portraits of these two highly complicated individuals is brilliantly convincing.' - William Boyd

'Ever since first reading Graham Greene's extraordinary foreword to my grandfather's autobiography, My Silent War, I have been intrigued by the relationship between one of Britain's most loved writers, and the real Third Man. In his vivid and rigorously researched new book, The Writer and the Traitor, acclaimed journalist Robert Verkaik shines new light on one of the most fascinating friendships of the Cold War - proving that fact is stranger than fiction, and just as compelling.' - Charlotte Philby, author of Edith and Kim


'A superb spy book. This masterpiece of forensic research asks troubling new questions about two of Britain's most mysterious and famously complex figures. Verkaik explores wartime secret service and reveals its hidden stories of friendship, loyalty and betrayal.' - Richard J Aldrich, author of GCHQ

'The novelist's eye of Kim Philby's friend and MI6 colleague Graham Greene certainly provides a new perspective on the treachery of Philby and the Cambridge spies. It may not all be fact. But it is all certainly plausible. And that makes for a richly entertaining tale.' - Professor Sir David Omand, former UK Security and Intelligence Coordinator

The friendship between Graham Greene and Kim Philby is one of the most mysterious of the twentieth century. Greene, the internationally lauded novelist who wrestled with the themes of faith and betrayal in his work. Philby, the British intelligence-officer-turned-spy for the Soviets, and one of the most reviled men of his era. The two men met as young MI6 officers in war-torn London, working together to defeat the Nazis.

But after Greene suddenly resigned just days before D-Day, questions started to arise. He turned back to literature, using his experience in the intelligence services as a backdrop for his novel Our Man in Havana and the screenplay of The Third Man. Lurking within the pages lay suspicions of his friend, with characters and plots echoing Philby's life. Was Philby the real 'third man'? Did Greene's work contain coded messages and warnings of betrayal to M16?

In this revelatory book, bestselling author Robert Verkaik chronicles the relationship of these two giants of the 20th century, spanning the defeat of Nazism and the end of the Cold War, right up until Philby's death in 1988. This is more than just a riveting tale of espionage; it is the story of an unusual friendship that survived against all odds. Ultimately, The Writer and the Traitor explores the perplexing question that nobody yet has why did Graham Greene remain loyal to Britain's most hated traitor?

373 pages, Kindle Edition

First published April 9, 2026

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Robert Verkaik

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
12 reviews
June 4, 2026
Graham Greene was never an author to encourage affection, either for himself, despite numerous extra-marital affairs, nor any of his characters. Where John Le Carre’s Smiley and Ian Fleming’s James Bond, are, in their own ways, heroes, even Greene’s key protagonists ‘on the right side’ had very human faults.
Robert Verkaik highlights this in a deeply, historically researched, extensive and surprisingly well-penned and easily read book, The Writer and the Traitor. It examines the professional and personal lives of one of the most prolific and respected authors of the 20th Century, and his deep, enduring friendship with possibly the most reviled British spy of the same period, Kim Philby.
Whilst it’s important to have read several of Greene’s novels before tackling Verkaik’s book, it leaves readers with a strong desire to go back to several of them and read the re-defined real lives and names of the characters Greene has created. Verkaik’s style of writing is captivating and enthralling, rather than being a straightforward historic text. Neither Graham Greene nor Kim Philby is unblemished, but they are not roundly reviled. Their faults are properly set against a background of the century, its wars and subterfuges, and the power of espionage.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews