The Dumbest Spy in the World
Cummings, C. (2001). A Spy By Nature. New York: St. Martins
The protagonist is a recent college graduate in London who works in a dead end telemarketing job and feels his life drifting. He applies for a job as a spy and apparently does well in the application, but is ultimately rejected without explanation. Or is he really? A retired MI5 acquaintance mysteriously invites him to join his international oil firm as a clerk, with a covert mission to spy on a competing American oil company. Young Alec accepts the job despite the lousy pay, long hours and probationary status, and sets about charming the socks off a couple of Americans in London who represent the American oil firm. He manages to establish a solid friendship, skillfully presenting himself as disgruntled, so that, predictably, the Americans turn him and soon he is passing information about the London oil company to them. All this takes at least 200 pages and is skillfully written. Then Alec acts stupidly, completely and unbelievably out of character, the dumbest spy in the world, and his cover is blown, his career ended. The end.
The story is very plodding and predictable, with essentially no dramatic tension, because there is nothing significant at stake, and because there is no situational drama baked into the cake. What keeps the book from screaming boredom is good writing in thoughtful and keenly observed, if mundane, scenes.