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  • Nov 30, 2024 | waterstones.com | Nick Harkaway |John le Carré

    Monday 2nd December 2024 18:30 at Waterstones, London - Hampstead We are delighted to announce that Nick Harkaway will be coming to Waterstones Hampstead to discuss his critical and commercial hit book, Karla's Choice. Nick Harkaway - John le Carré's son - returns readers to the shadowy world of George Smiley in this enthralling slice of espionage fiction, which introduces the redoubtable agent's steely nemesis in a page-turning plot of deceit and danger.

  • Nov 14, 2024 | theadvertiser.ie | Nick Harkaway

    A John le Carré NovelBy Nick HarkawayGripping novel set in the universe of John le Carré’s most iconic spy, George Smiley, written by acclaimed novelist Nick HarkawayIt is spring in 1963 and George Smiley has left the Circus. With the wreckage of the West’s spy war with the Soviets strewn across Europe, he has eyes only on a more peaceful life.

  • Nov 14, 2024 | rapidcityjournal.com | Diana Chambers |Nick Harkaway |Ben Macintyre |Rachel Kushner

    BOOKS | REVIEWSThere's a new book about spies hitting shelves just about every week and something for just about every taste. But with so many to choose from, it can be tricky to decide which group of double-crossers is for you. So we're here to help. Here are six of this fall's cloak-and-dagger books, each with a diff erent focus:SPIES WITH ROMANCE"The Secret War of Julia Child"By Diana R.

  • Nov 1, 2024 | bookreporter.com | Nick Harkaway

    In this brooding thriller, novelist Nick Harkaway --- who is John le Carré’s son --- sets out to recreate George Smiley and his world in the years between THE SPY WHO CAME IN FROM THE COLD (1963) and TINKER TAILOR SOLDIER SPY (1974). He admits at the beginning of the book that he was wary about taking this on, but he didn't have to worry: KARLA’S CHOICE is a welcome addition to the canon.

  • Nov 1, 2024 | literaryreview.co.uk | Nick Harkaway

    In May 1966, an aggrieved John le Carré wrote to the editor of the Soviet newspaper Literaturnaya Gazeta in response to a critical review. Noting that his books were at that point unavailable in the Soviet Union, he set out his stall for the benefit of (sadly imaginary) Russian readers: ‘I have equated, in hypothetical terms, the conduct of East and West in the espionage war.

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