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<text id=89TT1438>
<title>
May 29, 1989: A Master Hits His Old Pace
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
May 29, 1989 China In Turmoil
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
BOOKS, Page 86
A Master Hits His Old Pace
</hdr><body>
<p>By Paul Gray
</p>
<qt> <l>THE RUSSIA HOUSE</l>
<l>by John le Carre</l>
<l>Knopf; 353 pages; $19.95</l>
</qt>
<p> Under interrogation, quite a few members of John le Carre's
vast and devoted reading public might confess a gnawing secret:
the wish that the author would get on with his stories a bit
more speedily than he has been doing for the past 15 or so
years. Ever since Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy (1974), in this
view, Le Carre has been unduly shifting emphasis from action to
atmospherics; his espionage plots remained splendidly inventive,
but they arrived splintered into ambiguities worthy of Henry
James. Which was fine, maybe, for those who wanted their cold
war shenanigans decked out in the trappings of The Golden Bowl.
But what was wrong with the heart-stopping pace of The Spy Who
Came in from the Cold (1963)? And will it ever come again?
</p>
<p> Nothing was wrong with it, of course, and it is back for
sure in The Russia House. Scarcely a dozen pages into this
novel, Le Carre's twelfth, a document of potentially enormous
importance has been passed from East to West during an exhibit
of audiocassette wares in Moscow. Three grubby notebooks full
of highly technical drawings and mathematical notations also
contain some eye-popping assertions: "The American strategists
can sleep in peace. Their nightmares cannot be realised. The
Soviet knight is dying inside his armour." If true, such
statements and the accompanying evidence pointing out the
military incompetence of the U.S.S.R. will obviously have
profound effects on Western defense policies. On the other hand,
the whole thing could be just another piece of devious
disinformation.
</p>
<p> The task of deciding which it is initially falls on British
intelligence; the notebooks have fetched up in London, intended
for a seedy and temporarily missing publisher named Bartholomew
Scott Blair, known familiarly as Barley. The first priority is
to find him. The second is to grill him until he admits his
involvement in a duplicitous plot. Failing that, the third
imperative is to enlist Barley as a spy and send him off to
discover more about his mysterious Soviet informant.
</p>
<p> The publisher seems particularly ill-suited for such an
assignment. His life so far has been a model of
irresponsibility: heavy drinking, an accumulation of debts,
ex-wives and mistresses. But Barley is not the only odd man out.
Witnessing and narrating these events is Horatio Benedict
dePalfrey, a lawyer who has spent the past 20 years of his
career papering over the questionable deeds of the secret
service, mopping up after the people he calls espiocrats. "I am
quickly dealt with," he writes of himself. "You need not stumble
on me long." To the contrary. He, "old Harry" or "old Palfrey"
to his colleagues, is the one who shapes this story, colors it
with his own disillusionments, invites credibility through his
own refusal to believe in much of anything at all. And, early
on, he drops a crucial hint about what is to come, portraying
himself in his nondescript office "while I draft our official
whitewash of the operation we called the Bluebird."
</p>
<p> This touch alone reveals the reason why Le Carre makes all
his alleged competitors -- the Ludlums, the Clancys, the
Trevanians, even the Deightons -- look like knuckle-typers.
Palfrey is describing a failure, an intricate scheme that
collapses somewhere along the tortuous road plotted for its
success. The world will not be saved, love will not triumph, and
tomorrow will dawn with the same grimy sense of indeterminate
morals and motives as yesterday. This much is certain. What
remains to be discovered is the marvelously engrossing way in
which everything can go wrong.
</p>
<p> So. Barley passes muster with the British crew and later
with the more suspicious contingent from the CIA, but not
before protesting, "I thought the Cold War was supposed to be
over." Back in the Soviet Union, seeking out the woman who had
forwarded the presumptive secrets and trying to get at their
source, he encounters glasnost and perestroika everywhere he
turns. One Moscow literary type wonders, "When will they start
repressing us again to make us comfortable?" Another informs
him, "We have no more problems! In the old days we had to assume
that everything was a mess! Now we can look in our newspapers
and confirm it!" Barley must tunnel beneath this thawing
surface, test how far it takes to get to the chilling center
underneath.
</p>
<p> It is impossible to tell, from page to page, just how this
improbable hero will perform his role, not only for the nervous
intelligence officers monitoring his every move but for the
readers as well. With scarcely an intimation of sex, no violence
and not a side arm visible, Le Carre has again managed to
construct a plot of commanding suspense. Never before has he so
successfully merged his narrative and contemplative gifts. The
Russia House is both afire and thought provoking, a thriller
that demands a second reading as a treatise on our times.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>