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House of Cards
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16761 |
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BOOK WORLD
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9 / 1989 |
1,996 Words |
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Herbert E. Meyer Herbert E. Meyer, a former vice chairman of the National
Intelligence Council who reported directly to the director of
Central Intelligence, is now a consultant and lecturer on
intelligence. His new book, Real World Intelligence, provides
an in-depth profile of what business intelligence is and how
it works. |
THE RUSSIA HOUSE
John le Carre
New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1989
353 pp., $19.95
Every so often a world-famous novelist and his publisher produce a book that is so screwed up--so wrongheaded, so disconnected from reality, so poorly executed--that you wonder why on earth no one involved in the project sounded an alarm and stopped the presses long enough to either fix the bloody thing or kill it. Usually the answer is this: What has been produced isn't a novel at all, but rather a political tract in the form of a novel; since those involved agree with the tract's thesis and want to help spread it, they aren't operating on traditional standards of quality.
Such a novel-shaped tract is The Russia House, the new spy thriller by John le Carre.
The thesis of The Russia House is that the Cold War is really over, but it is being kept alive by--you guessed it--the CIA and its British counterpart MI6.
The plot that le Carre has concocted to develop his thesis is this: a Soviet scientist smuggles word to the West that the Soviet Union's high-technology weapons really don't work. But the West's intelligence services don't want to hear this because--naturally--if Soviet weapons don't work, the Soviet Union isn't really a threat; hence the intelligence services will be out of business. So the CIA and "The Russia House"--which in le Carre's jargon is the operations directorate of British intelligence--contrive with their
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