Friday, March 20, 2026

John Le Carre's A Murder Of Quality

John Le Carre's second novel, a follow-up to Call for the Dead, is in no way a spy novel, but instead a straight murder mystery story. A Murder of Quality sees Le Carre's most famous character, George Smiley, called upon to help solve the murder of a woman at an English private school. I enjoyed this book, despite it not being the spy novel I thought it was going to be. However, I don't have a ton to say about it.

The only complaint I do have is how unabashedly British it is. What I mean by that is there are descriptions and settings that somewhat flew over my head and I found myself a little confused at what was actually being discussed. I'm not entirely sure if it was because it was set in the early 1960s and things were just quite different back then or if it was how the British-isms weren't fully explained for an American reader. It quite possibly was a bit of both.

Overall, the story was very engaging and I found myself not wanting to put it down. Keeping track of who the characters were when it came to all the school faculty and their wives was a little difficult, but didn't take away from my enjoyment.

I've already started Le Carre's next novel, The Spy Who Came in from the Cold, and I've read that story before, along with watching the movie. I know I like it, so the first three novels Le Carre published are all worthy of your time.

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Shoot For The Moon ...

Near the end of 2024 I went to see the film Gladiator II with Jack. After viewing and rating the movie on IMDb and Letterbox, I discovered it was my 3,000 film to view and rate. Since that time without really being too motivated, I have watched a little over 100 movies. Although I've gone through all of the classics in film history and my movie watching frequency has certainly declined since having children, I have decided to impose a goal for myself that probably isn't attainable.

I am currently 45 years old and in those years I've watched about 3,100 films. My improbable goal is to hit 4,000 movies by the time I turn 50. I only average about 68 movies per year, so in reality I will be lucky to hit 3,500 by my 50th birthday. However, with a little motivation and a lot of time invested toward new movies, no matter how disinteresting they may look, I can possibly hit the 4,000 mark by August 9, 2030.

If my math is correct, I am going to have to watch one new movie every other day. Working from home definitely makes this achievable, but likely impossible. We'll see how close I get, but the work is going to be fun to say the least.

Friday, March 13, 2026

John Le Carre's Call For The Dead

Late last year I went on a little John le Carre run of novels in what is known as the Karla trilogy. It is made up of the stories Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, The Honourable Schoolboy, and Smiley's People. While reading those three novels I learned that le Carre's most famous character George Smiley was part of his debut novel, Call for the Dead.

I knew about George Smiley because he is a supporting character in The Spy Who Came in from the Cold, which I have read previously and seen the film adaptation several times. I had also watched the most recent film version of Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy. After finishing the Karla trilogy, I decided to dive into other Smiley adventures and in doing so discovered that Call for the Dead and The Spy Who Came in from the Cold were directly linked.

All this being said, I am now in a run of stories by le Carre and the first was Call for the Dead. It was a very engaging spy thriller, but was a little more of a who-done-it murder mystery than a straight spy story. John le Carre is considered one of the greatest, if not the greatest, spy novelists of all time, known for his stories being the most realistic, complex, and morally ambiguous. This likely stems from the fact that he worked for both MI5 and MI6.

The Karla trilogy of books is certainly what most readers will point to when thinking of his best works. However, I wasn't entirely hooked by the two later stories in the trilogy. I found Call for the Dead to be much more of a page turner and found myself treating it more like an Agatha Christie mystery than an Ian Fleming spy adventure.

Finding this novel to be so entertaining, I followed it up with a viewing of the film adaptation, titled The Deadly Affair, from 1967 starring James Mason as the George Smiley character, but renamed due to the film rights being owned by a different production company. Unfortunately, the movie didn't quite live up to the book. The changes made didn't enhance the viewing and there was a subplot created around Smiley's wife's infidelity that dragged along. In the book his wife is simply out of the picture, having run off with a new lover. You get references to her throughout the book, but him having to cope with her running around on him isn't actively part of the story.

I very much enjoyed this book and after finishing it wanted to dive right into le Carre's second novel, also featuring Smiley, A Murder of Quality. It should be a quick read if it is at all as interesting as Call for the Dead.

Monday, March 09, 2026

Elmore Leonard's Raylan

We've come to the end of the road for our favorite U.S. marshal, Raylan Givens, at least in literary form. The final novel featuring the lawman who seemed more suited to live in the Old West than current times was aptly named after our hero, Raylan.

Having read the previous stories by author Elmore Leonard, this novel is based solely in the reality of the FX television series and is not a direct follow-up to the previous tales. The biggest sign that this is the case is the fact that, spoiler alert for the short story Fire in the Hole, Boyd Crowder is still alive. It seems the writers or producers of the show liked Walton Goggins so much as Boyd that they kept him alive on the television show. The details of his introduction play out nearly the exact same way as they do in the short story he was featured in, however, the ending changes with him surviving his shootout with Raylan.

I'm not sure when the last novel was written in comparison to what season was taking place, but there were also some slight (and in certain cases major) differences between Raylan and the TV show. The one that comes to mind most easily are two characters by the name of Coover and Dickie. In the novel they are part of the Crowe family and end up dealt with rather quickly in the first few chapters. However, in the show they are part of the Bennett family from season two and their fates are quite different.

Despite these difference and inconsistencies with how the literary Raylan Givens compares to his television counterpart, the novel was interesting. However, many elements of it were repurposed into the series, so it all felt a bit familiar. It was sort of like a mirror episode of Star Trek or being in an alternate Spider-Man universe. Everything was nearly the same, but the inconsistencies were jarring.

I'll be taking a little break from Leonard, but will get back into his novels a little later.