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Book Reviews of Call for the Dead

Call for the Dead
Call for the Dead
Author: John Le Carre
ISBN: 13574
Publication Date: 1962
Pages: 128
Rating:
  • Currently 4/5 Stars.
 2

4 stars, based on 2 ratings
Publisher: Walker and Co.
Book Type: Hardcover
Reviews: Write a Review

4 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

reviewed Call for the Dead on + 813 more book reviews
This is Le Carrés first novel in which he created his master spy, George Smiley: short, stout, mild-mannered, obscure-looking (for ones concept of a spy). It is post WW II and Smiley is being forced into retirement, but first, one last task: an interview. Too bad that his object turns up dead as a door nail the next day: an apparent suicide. Hold on! He left a wake up call and failed to consume a self-prepared snack. So here is Smiley, back on the track of spies as the cold war looms in the future. The novel also forebodes Smileys life to come; his attractive, titled wife has left him, he forced into retirement, he is called back.
reviewed Call for the Dead on + 24 more book reviews
Just started reading LeCarre, as this is his first book I thought it was pretty good. Didn't understand why he needed to write a report at the end repeating a lot but clearing up a few things. over all a nice read.
jjares avatar reviewed Call for the Dead on + 3405 more book reviews
Recently, I've hit a dry patch in my reading; everything is the 'same-old-same-old' or the dialogue is awful. So, I decided to reread some of my old favorites. I remember loving all of John Le Carre's George Smiley spy stories. Masterpiece Theatre's visual interpretations of the Le Carre stories were superb. It was time to turn back the clock to the Cold War -- when you knew who your enemies were!

What I love about this book is that Le Carre doesn't fill in all the dots, he makes the reader work to understand what is going on in the story. When I got to the story of Dieter, one of Smiley's war-time associates, I remembered the gist of the story. This in no way diminished my enjoyment of the novel. This book is the opening salvo in a group of marvelous spy novels.

George Smiley Spy Novels
1. A Call for the Dead (1961)
2. A Murder of Quality (1962)
3. The Spy Who Came in from the Cold (1963)
4. The Looking Glass War (1965)
5. Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy (1974)
6. The Honourable Schoolboy (1977)
7. Smiley's People (1979)
reviewed Call for the Dead on + 16 more book reviews
This was a curious story.

The book isn't very big. There isn't a wasted word. For a lot of books that's a great thing, but this is a rare exception. The story was so streamlined that it took away from my experience. You're in the head of Smiley at times, but there are other times, seemingly as important or more important, when you aren't. When you aren't you are filled in later when Smiley either writes a letter or a report. That aides in speeding up the story and adding to those ah ha moments. Which typically works, but for this it hurt the overall story because things felt a little too quick.

But this story is worth the read. The characters are nicely developed, and the dialogue between them is crisp. The story is a bit dated - especially with some of the language - and Smiley is a fascinating man, very unconventional too. The word choice by Le Carré can at times be a bit flowery which sometimes works and sometimes doesn't. Mostly it does.

Give it a go. It's a fun story, and as I mentioned above, a quick one.