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Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy

Audiobook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks

Somewhere at the very highest levels of British Intelligence there stands a double agent, a "mole," implanted deep in its fabric, perhaps decades ago, by Moscow Centre. He can only be one of five men—brilliant, complicated men, proven in action, who have worked closely together through the years, respecting and depending on each other, despite the central imperative of their profession to trust no one.

Of these five, it is George Smiley, perhaps the most brilliant and complicated of them all, who is tapped to dig out the mole and destroy him. And so Smiley embarks on his blind night walk, retracing path after path into his own past––its aliases, covers, sleights of hand––burrowing into the dust of unresolved episodes.

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      The Cold War, perhaps dead in reality, lives on vibrantly in Michael Jayston's reading of a literary spy classic. This installment of the le Carré canon has George Smiley trying to uncover a Soviet mole in the British Secret Service. Jayston's rich, full-bodied voice recreates the paranoia, urgency, and dread implicit in any Soviet threat. He reads with a steady pace and allows the story to unfold naturally, with all the twists and turns subtly revealed. Jayston, a British actor, gives each character a distinct voice, and his inflections uncover their motivations and foibles. He even pauses well. The result is an intelligent book read with respect for the reader's intelligence. R.I.G. (c) AudioFile 2002, Portland, Maine
    • AudioFile Magazine
      This taut and subtle adaptation effectively presents le Carré's classic spy novel as a three-hour drama for voices--no mean feat of compression and interpretation. The acting, too, is superb, as are the production values. Simon Russell Beale gives us a stoic, admirable, and touching George Smiley, surely ironically named, who is underemployed, and lonely for his unfaithful wife. He is called out of retirement to investigate whether the secret service he had given his life to is corrupted by a Russian mole at the highest level of power. Smiley is spared nothing in the unraveling of this tale of multiple betrayals, but the listener is richly rewarded by a dazzling cast and so enjoyable a performance that this reviewer found two back-to-back listens were barely enough. B.G. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award (c) AudioFile 2010, Portland, Maine

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  • English

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