The Spymaster as Vacuum-Cleaner Salesman [by DL]

Graham Greene<<<

And the sad man is cock of all his jests.

— George Herbert

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Epigraph to Graham Greene's novel Our Man in Havana (1958). The protagonist — an English widower living in pre-Castro Cuba — is a vacuum-cleaning salesman named Wormwold, as unattractive a name as Greene could manage. In order to satisfy the demands of intelligence officers in a gray faceless London building, Wormwold dupes them by creating "purely notional spies" and killing them off, "like a bad novelist preparing an effect." (Alec Guiness plays him in the movie.) The book is in a comic tenor but is less a spoof than a forcible statement on the extent to which military intelligence work and espionage fiction resemble one another.

– DL