Description of Charlie M at Open Road Media:
Charlie Muffin is an anachronism. He came into the intelligence service in the early 1950s, when the government, desperate for foot soldiers in the impending Cold War, dipped into the middle class for the first time. Despite a lack of upper-class bearing, Charlie survived twenty-five years on the espionage battle’s front line: Berlin.
But times have changed: The boys from Oxford and Cambridge are running the shop again, and they want to get rid of the middle-class spy who’s a thorn in their side. They have decided that it’s time for Charlie to be sacrificed. But Charlie Muffin didn’t survive two decades in Berlin by being a pushover. He intends to go on protecting the realm, and won’t let anyone from his own organization get in his way.Charlie Muffin does not fit in with the rest of the men he works with. They look down on him and consider him "a disposable embarrassment, with his scuffed suede Hush Puppies, the Marks and Spencer shirts he didn’t change daily and the flat, Mancunian accent." And they underestimate his abilities.
Charlie's boss, Sir Henry Cuthbertson, has learned that an important Russian KGB official, General Valery Kalenin, wants to defect. He and his team start plotting to set up the defection, excluding Charlie. The CIA finds out about the scheme and insist on being part of the plan. Things start to go badly with Cuthbertson's scheme, and they are forced to use Charlie in the end.
As you can probably tell from the description, the Charlie Muffin books are closer to the Nameless Spy series by Len Deighton than the James Bond type of espionage. This is the kind of Cold War spy fiction I enjoy, and I hope the rest of the series is as entertaining.
There is a very unexpected ending (at least for me) and I don't know exactly how the series can continue, but there are 15 more books in the series, so somehow it does.
The ebook I read features an interesting biography of Brian Freemantle with photographs from the author’s personal collection.
See also Col's review at Col's Criminal Library.
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Publisher: Open Road Media, 2011 (orig. publ. 1977)
Length: 207 pages
Format: ebook
Publisher: Open Road Media, 2011 (orig. publ. 1977)
Length: 207 pages
Format: ebook
Series: Charlie Muffin, #1
Setting: UK, Germany, Russia
Genre: Espionage fiction
Source: On my Kindle since 2013.
Setting: UK, Germany, Russia
Genre: Espionage fiction
Source: On my Kindle since 2013.