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Loading... The London Embassyby Paul Theroux
''The London Embassy'' shows an advancement and maturing of the perception of London demonstrated in Mr. Theroux's earlier novel, ''The Family Arsenal,'' a book over-indebted to Conrad's ''Secret Agent'' that treated the greatest English city as if it were all banana republics rolled into one and saw total anarchic breakdown in every wall graffito and football stadium dust-up. The new book is mellower and probably wiser. London, far from being the city of dreadful night where the carrion birds of empire come home to roost, is a complex human environment where decent and civil intercourse is still sometimes possible. Surveying the involvements of the Grosvenor Square Americans with the natives during business hours and after, Paul Theroux rings new changes on the old international theme and the old relationship that somehow endures.
References to this work on external resources.
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Sometimes the writing is as grumpy and belligerent as Theroux himself sometimes is, but it is constantly witty and surprising … as the author always is! The book is made up of 18 chapters that form short-stories in themselves, and each usually explores a different character (usually eccentric) or aspect of the life of a FSO – 4, Political Officer, working in the American Embassy in London. (” … this was also a promotion for me .. from FSO-5, as a Consular Officer to FSO-4, political Officer. My designation was POL-1,not to be confused with POL-2, the CIA .. I was only a spy in the most general and harmless sense of the word”.) Having some limited experience of both British and American Embassies and Foreign Service officers, I found the descriptions of the various roles and tasks – as well as the actual characters of the Embassy officers – very sound and believable.
Strangely, given the published date and the chosen period Theroux set his book in, it is not ‘dated’ in any of the functions, attitudes or characters who people his stories.
A great – if short – read.