Charlotte Bingham is a successful novelist and screenwriter. She wrote a memoir of her life as a debutante, Coronet Among the Weeds, when she was 19, which became a bestseller and led to further memoirs of her life, including Spies and Stars. Her father, John Bingham, was a member of MI5 and an inspiration for John le Carré’s character George Smiley.
Bingham’s memoir is humorous and absurdist, recounting the strange world of British espionage in the 1950s and the paranoia surrounding the rise of communism in the West. Bingham and her boyfriend, Harry, are reluctantly called on to use their writing partnership to explore and infiltrate the entertainment world in the hopes of discovering communist agents. Instead, a lot of what they seem to find is disillusionment about the role of a writer, nearly all the spies appear to be working for MI5, and that the more they try to escape their jobs, perversely, the more they are wanted.
It is a slice-of-life book where nothing much can be said happens; a lot of her writing projects come to nought or are wholly transformed into other properties. However, Bingham presents the often comic scenes well; it is a crash course in trying to make it as a professional screenwriter, and the bizarre situations she often found herself in when trying to balance working as both a writer and a spy are entertaining.
It is a fun read, and I would be interested to read more about her life as it appears more than a little strange! As I hadn’t read her other memoirs before this, there are references to previous books and events, but the book can still be read as a standalone.