In this his 19th novel, John le Carre brings his superb skills as a master storyteller of the spy thriller genre; on this occasion, utilising the backdrop of the latter half of the 20th century referencing the Germany he knew so well in the Cold War. However, we are also treated to the story leading up to unification as well as the situation in 2003 when Germany opposed the invasion of Iraq by British & American forces in pursuit of supposed "Weapons of Mass Destruction ", when the novel commences.
We first meet the parody of a naive colonial Englishman, Ted Mundy, standing on a soapbox in a Bavarian castle working as a tour guide, wearing a bowler hat & an elderly tweed jacket, emblazoned with a Velcro-attached Union Jack flag to his breast pocket. He's broke, on the run from debtors of his defunct English language school after his partner, Egon, vanished with the assets, & thoroughly annoyed by the Gulf War. Then, out of the blue, his great friend, Sasha, arrives, to whisk him off on another idealistic adventure, but this one offers so much more....
But, as always with JLC, there is always so much more! There's a great backstory of a childhood spent in Pakistan after partition of India; a military father banished from the service following a court-martial; mother & twin sister who perished at birth; followed by a public boarding school education in the country, described as "a rain-swept cemetery for the living dead powered by a forty-watt bulb."
Then, his solace in German extension lessons from a left wing German refugee, which allows him to go to Oxford on a scholarship to read German. Here, he comes under the influence of a female Hungarian firebrand, Ilse, who espouses many radical causes. He becomes her willing partner to everything, including her bed.
He heads off to Germany for his 2nd year with an introduction to Sasha, Ilse's ex-boyfriend, in West Berlin, who is a leading light of the radical left student movement, living in a commune. Multiple adventures then ensue, not all involving the authorities, but he gets seriously "eingebläut" following 1 rally when he saves Sasha's life! i.e. he gets a full work-over by the West German police!
There then follows a 10 year hiatus in their friendship as they follow different directions with Ted failing in several career paths before he obtains a job at the British Council responsible for Youth cultural experiences. At which point, Sasha & Ted are re-acquainted with Sasha, again creating a change in Ted's career path...before perestroika causes the implosion of the East German Communist party, causing Sasha to disappear from Germany as an ex-Stasi agent & Ted is forced into early retirement from his espionage work.
I am not going to divulge the ending apart from to conclude that the familiar tragic themes of love, loyalty, loss & betrayal are present & I was heartbroken! It seemed appropriate that I was reading the last chapter listening to Arvo Pärt's Spiegel im Spiegel.
Overall, this book is a great read, lighter in tone than others I have read by the same author but still offers plenty of gritty polemics on the politics of student movements in the 1960s in Europe. The shenanigans of the Iraq war & the manipulation of public opinion in its occasion is discussed as well as the pending threat of indoctrination by corporate militaristic organisations, all pertinent to the world still in 2019. i.e Blackwater, Chelsea Manning.
Probably, 4.5 stars for this one; but it will be re-read possibly in a couple more years rather than TLDG, which remains as the "gold standard "!
And yes, pretty please, make a film of it- Florence Pugh would make a great Ilse, I am sure that she could master a Hungarian flavoured English accent! Ideally directed by Joe Wright, score by Dario Marinelli in my ideal Utopian world!