John le Carre was born in 1931 and attended the universities of Bern and Oxford. He taught at Eton and served briefly in British Intelligence during the Cold War. For more than fifty years he has lived by his pen. He divides his time between London and Cornwall.
An immensely clever piece of novelistic engineering * Guardian * A splendid novel * Sunday Times * [A] late-career triumph * 1843 Magazine * It's brilliantly done and very enjoyable * Prospect * This really is vintage le Carre * Mail on Sunday * This sublime thriller * Sunday Mirror * Thrilling and fascinating - a satisfying close to the saga * The Independent * [Le Carre's] writing has lost none of its pith or potency . . . his powers of invention have kept up with the pace of an ever-changing and complex world' * The Scotsman * This is a truly wonderful, morally complex, politically astute novel written with elegance and panache . . . the visceral thrill of its twists and its complexities, its edge-of-the-seat qualities * Scotland on Sunday * Razor-sharp insight from the battle-weary Guillam and fascinating glimpses into the murky spycraft at the height of the Cold War only add to the joy of this sublimely accomplished thriller * The People * [As] labyrinthine as you'd expect ... le Carre has always been a master * The Tablet * Deeply moving in its portrait of a man adrift in a climate he no longer understands * Metro * le Carre has made and peopled a myth. Myths do not age * Financial Times * George Smiley is our favourite fictional spy * Sunday Express * A literary master for a generation * Observer * The best spy story I have ever read -- Graham Greene on The Spy Who Came In From The Cold He can communicate emotion, from sweating fear to despairing love, with terse and compassionate conviction. Above all, he can tell a tale. Formidable equipment for a rare and disturbing writer * Sunday Times * I have re-read The Spy Who Came In From The Cold over and over again since I first encountered it in my teens, just to remind myself how extraordinary a work of fiction can be -- Malcolm Gladwell The literary event of the Autumn * Evening Standard * We are back in the more interesting territory of moral uncertainty and failure. What, Smiley asks, was he fighting for? * TLS * Utterly engrossing and perfectly pitched, it is a triumph * Daily Mail * Ingenious * Washington Post * What are we to make of Smiley? What is his game? Do we like him? Admire him? Every le Carre reader has wrestled with these questions-and A Legacy of Spies brings them to the fore more directly than any previous book * Vanity Fair * His writing is as crisp as ever . . . another tale of intrigue which will slip effortlessly into its place in the Smiley canon * Daily Express * A Legacy of Spies deploys a complex and ingeniously layered structure to make the past alive in the present once more . . . le Carre has not lost his touch * Evening Standard * The English canon has rarely seen an acclaimed novelist and popular entertainer sustain such a hot streak in old age . . . A Legacy of Spies achieves many things. Outstandingly, it is a defiant assertion of creative vigour * The Observer * le Carre's masterful new novel -- Jonathan Freedland * The Guardian * It gives the reader, at long last, pieces of a jigsaw puzzle that have been missing for 54 years . . . A Legacy of Spies does something remarkable . . . Like wine, le Carre's writing has got richer with age * The Times * Perhaps the most significant novelist of the second half of the 20th century in Britain. He will have charted our decline and recorded the nature of our bureaucracies like no one else has. He's in the first rank -- Ian McEwan A brilliant novel of deception, love and trust to join his supreme espionage canon -- Simon Sebag Montefiore * Evening Standard, Books of the Year * Gripping, fast-paced . . . A splendid novel -- Andrew Marr * Sunday Times * Not since The Spy Who Came in From The Cold has le Carre exercised his gift as a storyteller so powerfully and to such thrilling effect -- John Banville * Guardian *