A Shadow Intelligence (An Elliot Kane Thriller)

by Oliver Harris

Elliot Kane (1)

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There is a dark side to MI6 that needs men like Elliot Kane - volatile, inquisitive, free-floating - in the field. They take them and put two years and over £100k into their training, showing them how to steal cars, strip weapons, and hack bank accounts. There are courses on the use of blackmail and improvised explosives, and entire workshops solely dedicated to navigating by the stars. But no one tells them how to go home. Kane has spent fifteen years managing events overseas that never show more make the papers. He is a ghost in his own life, assuming and shedding personalities as each new cover story comes into play. But when the woman he loves, another operative named Joanna Lake, vanishes without a trace in Kazakhstan, he is forced center stage in his own life. Drawn ever deeper into a realm of deception and conflicting agendas, Kane moves from merely infiltrating events to steering them. While he's well-versed in modern psychological warfare, snowbound Kazakhstan presents unique challenges - poised between China, Russia, and the West, dictatorship and democracy, state intelligence and an increasingly powerful world of private agencies, it's impossible to work out who is manipulating whom. And Kane's not the only one trying to figure out where Joanna Lake has gone or what she learned before disappearing. show less

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7 reviews
Elliot Kane is an academic, a poet, turned spy. He’s seriously considering returning to the literary world but for now is traveling, spying, manipulating events and people. He returns from Saudi Arabia when his operation is inexplicably cut short. He discovers his colleague and surreptitious lover Joanna Lake has left MI6 under a cloud after her own operation was aborted. She sends him an emergency message from Kazakhstan, then goes missing. Elliot goes to find her under his own power after his debriefers at MI6 bid him to stick around.

In Kazakhstan he stumbles onto an elaborate scheme to destabilize the country using social media. It’s leading up to the apparent discovery of a new oil field and the possibility of Russia moving in show more to annex part of Kazakhstan.

This a smart labyrinth of an espionage novel, even hyper-intelligent, as one character is described. Oliver Harris is particularly adept at detailing the many technical facets of cyber warfare: encryption, bots, social media manipulation, fake videos, malware, spyware. The story is rich in the details of espionage and surveillance and the pace never slows.
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Elliot Kane is a senior MI6 officer who, as the novel opens, has been engaged at the sharp end of an operation in Saudi Arabia that has just been compromised, with his agent arrested and imprisoned. Kane himself only just escapes from the agent’s house in time, where he has been endeavouring either to recover, or failing that, destroy, any incriminating documentation. He returns to London, to face an uncomfortable debriefing.

While adjusting to London life again, he receives, through complex back channels, an email from another of his field agents, warning him that he is in danger. Alarming under any circumstances, this is all the more striking as the agent in question had died several months previously. Kane realises that it was from show more his former partner, Joanna, who happened also to be the previous handler of that particular agent, who had helped establish the secret communication protocols. It is more than six months since Kane had had any contact with Joanna, and she now seems to have disappeared completely.

Placed on the intelligence community’s equivalent of ‘gardening leave’, Kane starts to investigate what might have happened to Joanna, which involves going over her most recent operations. These had involved her explorations of psyops, which had been her particular field of expertise, which had led her to an operation in Kazakhstan, where various western oil companies were competing for lucrative contracts as the country endeavoured to secure foreign exchange, and escape from its former complete dependency on Russia.

Oliver Harris sets the scenario very capably, and I found the background material about Kazakhstan utterly engrossing. (To be honest, before reading this book, everything I knew about Kazakhstan might comfortably have fit on the back of a stamp!). Sadly, I found that his plot became far too convoluted, and sinuous to the point of impenetrability. That might, of course, merely be a judgement on my own intellectual faculties, but as each new plot tangent arose, I found myself becoming increasingly punch drunk.
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Elliot Kane, if that is his real name, is a spy working for MI6, currently on a sabbatical recovering from some unspecified trauma on a previous operation. He learns that his girlfriend, Joanna, also a spy with MI6, has gone missing and may have left the service altogether under a cloud. Elliot tracks her to Kazakhstan.

Although his mission is unofficial he soon becomes embroiled in a complex operation between MI6, the Kazakhs and Russia for control of a vast new oilfield and ultimately the whole country. When he finds that both he and Joanna are being framed as having defected to Russia, with most people believing this, an almost impossible job of finding his girlfriend has become very dangerous as well.

Rather than a novel this book show more reads more like a memoir, or news reporting, or even a spy handbook. The language is generally very matter-of-fact and there is a lot of detail about the technical processes of spying. The plot is complex and there is a cloud of characters with undetermined or ever-changing motivations and allegiances, not least Kane who adopts a number of different personas depending on who he is dealing with.

A very good book that builds the tension quite slowly and uses uncertainty as a technique for keeping the reader off balance. Not as action-heavy alone might think, but a very good read.
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Elliot Kan is an agent with MI6. He lives on the edge of the organisation and has spent 15 years managing overseas operations. With one such coming to an end Elliot struggles to adapt to life that's not under cover and what other people may call normal. Elliot finds that whilst on his last mission, the woman he loves has left MI6 under a cloud and has vanished without a trace in Kazakhstan. Setting out to find her, Elliot finds himself drawn into a deep and complex conspiracy involving private security contractors and Russian intelligence.
I enjoyed this spy novel. It was complex and well-crafted with some interesting characters and a deep and clever plot. Interestingly (and without giving too much away) one of the themes is the way in show more which Putin seeks to annex and re-Sovietise countries in Central Asia, which obviously chimed well with current events in Ukraine. Excellent book, which was convincingly presented and kept the pages turning. show less
Well who is reading this in 2022? Much of what happens seemed to be taking place in Kazakhstan in January and now Russia has troops set to invade Ukraine. Too many subplots and a lot to process, but still a very topical read.
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For me the second half where media, disinformation and social network manipulation was the best part. It feels eerily plausible (if a bit unrealistically accelerate time-wise) given the post-truth world we live in. Overall the story felt implausible as the hero just leaves his spy organization and runs into people who he knew from past missions in other areas of the world who can help him just the right way. Still, it was an easy read.
modern spy thriller. lots of social media stuff. in the end a bit too tidily wrapped up?

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10+ Works 572 Members
Oliver Harris is a novelist and academic. He holds an MA in Shakespeare Studies from UCL, and a PhD on classical myth and psychoanalysis from the London Consortium (Birkbeck). He has taught at Birkbeck, London Metropolitan University and Cambridge Institute of Continuing Education.

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Genres
Fiction and Literature, Suspense & Thriller
DDC/MDS
823.92Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1900-2000-
LCC
PR6108 .A7658Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish Literature2001-
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Reviews
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Rating
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English, Hebrew
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ISBNs
15
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2