Ashenden, Or: The British AgentThis fascinating book contains probably the most expert stories of espionage ever written. For a period of time after it was first published, the book became official required reading for persons entering the British Secret Service. During World War I, Maugham enlisted with an ambulance unit, but was soon shifted to the Intelligence Department. Although these stories were based on the author's own experiences as a British agent during the war, he emphasized that they were written purely as entertainment, at which, indeed, Ashenden succeeds. Maugham's clarity of style, the perfection of his form, the subtlety of his thought, veiled thinly behind a worldly cynicism, has made him an international figure. |
From inside the book
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“When he reaches Lausanne he'll get a letter from her to say that the French
authorities won't let her cross the frontier and that she's going to Thonon, which is
just on the other side of the lake from Lausanne, in France, and she's going to
ask ...
There were not more than half a dozen passengers for Thonon and when they
had been examined and gone their way he strolled slowly along the pier. “Well,
it's no go,” he said to Felix who had been examining the passports. “The
gentleman ...
He said something in a language the man did not understand and then in French
asked him when the boat went to Thonon. When he got on board he looked
about, but did not see him, then he caught sight of him, huddled up in an ulster
with ...
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LibraryThing Review
User Review - lamour - LibraryThingThis is volume three of Maugham's collected short stories. In this volume he has put his stories that have the same protagonist, Ashendan who is recruited to move to Switzerland where he will be a ... Read full review
LibraryThing Review
User Review - jimgysin - LibraryThingIt's easy to see why this one is considered an archetype of espionage fiction. The fact that the book was first published back in the late 1920s means that some of the dialogue and narrative will ... Read full review