Reviews

Absolute Friends by John le Carré

austinburns's review against another edition

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4.0

meanders along for a hundred pages or so before snapping into focus and barreling along to a strong finish

rocketiza's review against another edition

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3.0

LeCarre is always great, but not my favorite LeCarre. Told in more of a wistful grandfather recounting tone, and more about the circumstances of the characters life than the intrigue they are involved in and figuring out.

kymme's review against another edition

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4.0

Excellent book. A fellow goodreads friend said it made Constant Gardener look like a Horatio Alger story. Indeed.

mtesterman's review against another edition

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4.0

Another audio book version, this time read by LeCarre himself.

This was really fascinating because it takes place largly in Germany, and the charecters spend a significant amount of time in Heidelberg.

LeCarre mentions a language academy, and describes it's location, but never names it. According to the description (up in an attic, 1 block from the Max Weber Haus, castle view, on the side of the mountain) I could say that the academy was at my house!

nedhayes's review against another edition

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5.0

Highly recommended "spy" fiction that reaches toward great literature.

In 2002, right after 9-11, John Le Carre embarked on this prescient project. He saw the lack of cooperation on the part of Old Europe in the War on Terror (remember the unwarranted invasion of Iraq?) and Le Carre wrote the definitive account of American betrayal of all their alliances and ideals in the service of realpolitik and neo-Christian fundamentalist American naivete.

In this work of near-historical fiction, even the title and the main character's extended decades-long relationship serve as a brilliant synedoche for the global politics and the tensions of the post 9-11 era. The way Germany and Britain and maintained an uneasy and fraught alliance since World War II is described not only in terms of overt politics, but also on a microcosmic level in the friendship of the two main characters, Sasha and Mundy. Le Carre exploits that dual relationship (Germany/England AND Sasha/Mundy) with careful thrusts that hit precisely perfect on the historical notes, but also demonstrates how carefully formed and fully fleshed his characters have become in the hands of a fiction master.

As is so often the case in Le Carre's writing, these seem to be real human beings we are reading about, not fictional phantasms.

Le Carre's mastery is in allowing his story to play out in all of its complicated rhythm, instead of truncating it to fit a Twitter-esque age. He makes us believe deeply in his characters, in order to demonstrate the true weight of catastrophic destruction that occurred in the War on Terror.

A masterwork, written presciently in a time of cultural frisson.

wwatts1734's review against another edition

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4.0

John LeCarre is one of the best writers of espionage thrillers out there, although his reputation was made in the 1970s and 80s with the Cold War motif. In Absolute Friends, LeCarre seeks to shore up his creditials in the post-Cold War world, and for the most part he does well. This is a great work of modern espionage drama.

Starting in the 1960s in West Germany among the idealistic youth movement of the time, two friends, Mundy and Sasha, a British and a German student, exchange ideas and become friends. Their friendship would extend for over three decades, into the Al Qaeda infused world of global politics in the first decade of the 21st Century. LeCarre, as always, takes the espionage novel beyond the "spy versus spy" motif. He brings in all of the intricate details of the world of international politics, from the international corporations that increasingly determine international relations to the arts and culture aspect of international exchange. Through the years, the two friends interact on several occasions, usually without success. Their relationship is complicated, and the situations that face are far from simple. The novel keeps the reader's attention and teaches a lot about international relations.

My only criticism of this novel is that it seems that LeCarre is too nostalgic and a little bitter in it. He dwells on the Cold War setting in this novel, perhaps at the expense of its relevance to the modern world. And LeCarre is obviously not happy with the direction of international relations, especially in the Bush era of war in Iraq and Afghanistan. His bitterness colors this novel a bit too much. I think that LeCarre could have used the corporate aspect of his plot to make the later part of the story more interesting. Still, this novel is worth reading. It is a great work from one of the greatest espionage writers in history.

captainpash's review against another edition

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challenging dark emotional mysterious medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

3.5

jazzypizzaz's review against another edition

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3.0

I forgot how much I love le Carré's writing. This one begs to be read with a bingo card of all his particular tropes and themes (for better and for worse). I zoned out for the ending, so I'm not entirely sure why what happened did happen.

cuavia's review against another edition

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adventurous challenging reflective tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

1.0

The style is particularly difficult to follow, and even if the story it's very interesting the ending was not what I was hopping for.

technomage's review against another edition

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4.0

I like to think that I have read most of John Le Carre's works but I didn't know about it until I found it in my local library. I really enjoyed it and it reminded me a bit of the tailor of panama with a bit of our game thrown.
It is, as the title suggests about friends Ted and Sasha met in the communes of Berlin, parted, met again, spied for each other, parted then met once more. It is very readable and quite sad but definitely a top notch Le Carre work.