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"It's how you play the game"... (Original Post) orangecrush Nov 2017 OP
Geez, I hope that's not true. nt Honeycombe8 Nov 2017 #1
LeCarre orangecrush Nov 2017 #2

orangecrush

(19,535 posts)
2. LeCarre
Sat Nov 18, 2017, 08:50 PM
Nov 2017

Born David John Moore Cornwell
19 October 1931 (age 86)
Poole, Dorset, England



Knows the subject well.

From 1948 to 1949, he studied foreign languages at the University of Bern in Switzerland. In 1950 he joined the Intelligence Corps of the British Army garrisoned in Austria, working as a German language interrogator of people who crossed the Iron Curtain to the West. In 1952, he returned to England to study at Lincoln College, Oxford, where he worked covertly for the British Security Service, MI5, spying on far-left groups for information about possible Soviet agents.[5]


"In 1960, Cornwell transferred to MI6, the foreign-intelligence service, and worked under the cover of Second Secretary at the British Embassy at Bonn; he later was transferred to Hamburg as a political consul. There, he wrote the detective story A Murder of Quality (1962) and The Spy Who Came in from the Cold (1963), as "John le Carré" (le Carré is French for "the square"[7]) – a pseudonym required because Foreign Office officers were forbidden to publish in their own names.

In 1964 le Carré left the service to work full-time as a novelist, his intelligence-officer career at an end as the result of the betrayal of British agents' covers to the KGB by Kim Philby, the infamous British double agent (one of the Cambridge Five).[5][10] Le Carré depicts and analyses Philby as the upper-class traitor, code-named "Gerald" by the KGB, the mole George Smiley hunts in Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (1974).[11][12]

- Wikipedia


(Sorry, couldn't get link to work.)

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