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The Tailor of Panama by John Le Carré
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The Tailor of Panama

by John Le Carre (otherwise under John Le Carré)

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1,00554,018 (3.25)12
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Sceptre (1999), Edition: New edition, Paperback, 464 pages

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Showing 5 of 5
Verwirrend und langatmig: Am Anfang fand ich die Idee sehr gut. Ein Promi-Schneider wird erpresst, für den engl. Geheimdienst seine Kunden auszuhorchen. Zum Opfer wird er, weil er ein Doppelleben führt und seine glorreiche Vergangenheit mittels seines sprachlichen Talents und seiner Phantasie erfunden hat. Dann wird es aber undurchsichtig. Die Handlung springt manchmal unmotiviert und schwer nachvollziehbar zwischen Vergangenheit und Gegenwart. Die Sache eskaliert und schlussendlich war ich froh, dass es endlich vorbei war.
  r1hard | Nov 22, 2009 |
Interesting spy thriller set in Panama after the collapse of the Noriega regime. Excellent sense of time and place and of the desperation of the characters making the best of a confusing time where no-one is sure of their future. At the centre of this Pendel, the Tailor, and Osnard, a British agent, each weave lies over lies and attempt to create their own realities, that in the end must crumble despite their ever more frantic story-telling. ( )
  JustAGirl | Mar 15, 2008 |
The plot though rather good, could not keep my attention. Some of the characters are well written, but others, seem to drag the book down. The book does not flow and you will find yourself putting it down to do something. The story is a satire on the time when America has just handed over the Panama canal. Though I cannot believe that any agency would fall for the information that was passed on by Harry, the tailor and would be spy. Of course I read the whole book, because my rule is once you start ....finish it. Other wise , I would have put it down. ( )
  mramos | Aug 23, 2007 |
The tailor of the title is just that, and working in Panama. British Intelligence has a hold on him, and recruits him to make up an operation that will trick the American military into coming in and taking hold of the island again.

They want this to happen because of a local Panamian organisation that wants to take control of the Panama Canal back into local hands.

http://notfreesf.blogspot.com/2007/03... ( )
  bluetyson | Mar 6, 2007 |
Subpar LeCarre.

The story felt like an earlier draft of Absolute Friends, but not as compelling. Better than your average thriller, but still not recommended.
(And the disclaimer at the end about how the real British embassy staff are nothing like what's portraited in the novel kinda destroys the whole impact of the book. Why write a book implying a certain view of the how the world works then say, on the last page, "BTW I don't believe a word of this".) ( )
  name99 | Nov 25, 2006 |
Showing 5 of 5
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Series (with order)
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People/Characters
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Awards and honors
Epigraph
"Quel Panama!"
Expression current in France
in the early years of this century:
describes an insoluble mess.
-- (See McCuloough's admirable The Path Between the Seas.)
Dedication
In memory of
Rainer Heumann,
literary agent, gentleman and friend
First words
It was a perfectly ordinary Friday afternoon in the tropical Panama until Andrew Osnard barged into Harry Pendel's shop asking to be measured for a suit.
Quotations
'And we dress, sir – ? Most of my gentlemen seem to favour left these days.'
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
Disambiguation notice
Publisher's editors
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References to this work on external resources.

Wikipedia in English

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Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 0345420438, Mass Market Paperback)

John le Carré, the greatest spy novelist of the Cold War era, continues his post-Cold War quest to define the genre he helped perfect. The classic spy novel was essentially a story of good (England, the United States) vs. evil (Nazi Germany, the Soviet Union), in which good more or less prevailed. The Tailor of Panama is something else entirely: a spy novel with no spies in which the bad guys reap most of the rewards. It is also a viciously funny satire. The novel is set in Panama, where a plot is in place to make void the Panama Treaty, which would return control of the Panama Canal to the Panamanians in 1999. At the center of events is Harry Pendel, the tailor of the title. Coerced into working for British Intelligence, he concocts out of whole cloth a left-wing movement with the goal of luring the American military to do the dirty work--invade Panama à la 1989 and nullify the treaty. From the characters to the setting, le Carré has succeeded in setting new parameters for an old genre.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:01 -0400)

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