John le Carré has patiently established himself over the last twenty-five years as the discriminating reader's favourite thriller writer. The BBC's adaptations of the George Smiley trilogy in 1979 and 1982 made him almost overnight a popular author on the Ian Fleming scale, and it can have done no harm that the TV version of Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy coincided with the Blunt scandal. Now, as a rite of academic canonisation, three critical monographs have been published which respectfully analyse his fiction.
LRB 3 April 1986 | PDF Download
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