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Disorderly Elements

door Bob Cook

LedenBesprekingenPopulariteitGemiddelde beoordelingAanhalingen
283845,438 (4.14)2
A humorous debut spy novel for fans of Ross Thomas, featuring a Cold War MI6 intelligence analyst who uses rumors of a leak to defer his imminent layoff. "There's a recession on, you know." With an unemployed son and a baby on the way, these are not words that Michael Wyman wants to hear, particularly not from his employers, the university where he's a professor of philosophy, or the British secret service for which he's worked for 30 years. And he most particularly doesn't want to hear them from both employers at once, accompanied by the information that he's being laid off without a pension. Happily, a miracle is at hand, in the form of a Communist spy burrowed deep in the highest reaches of British intelligence. An East German defector can identify the spy, thus safeguarding national security and protecting the government from crippling embarrassment. He is willing to give up the information, but only to one man. At fifty-six years old, Wyman has one last chance to get back in the game . . . and get out on his own terms. Praise for Disorderly Elements "A delightful and clever first novel with a fast-moving plot, extremely witty dialogue, and a style that combines the best of espionage fiction with a "sting" of classic proportions." --Library Journal "The writing is unusually alert, and it is hard to believe that Disorderly Elements is a first novel. Mr. Cook's 56-year-old Michael Wyman is one of the more unusual heroes in espionage fiction." --The New York Times "Witty, irreverent, and tremendously amusing." --Liverpool Echo (UK) "Spy fiction has a splendid new recruit." --The Observer (UK)… (meer)
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Michael Wyman is a philosopher, an academic loaned to MI6, but has lost both jobs due to budget cuts. Before he leaves he discovers a potential leak when one of his East German networks is blown. He convinces his superiors that an investigation is necessary, despite alarming them with the potential costs.

Wyman’s self-generated persona as a “genial nincompoop” is good cover for a sharp and erudite mind. Being made doubly redundant and doubly betrayed by the system he believed in has brought out Wyman’s true talents as well as a desire for financial stability and a bit of revenge. He draws the CIA and KGB into his leak investigation. At one point the CIA officer, Rawls, realizes “Wyman’s success lay entirely in his ability to convince others of his own ineptitude and harmlessness.”

Bob Cook is good with a turn of phrase. A CIA supervisor is “A loud-mouthed slob who ate hamburgers instead of taking baths.” Another minor character is described as “a plump little barman with no hair and the complexion of a dead fish.”

An entertaining story from 1985 that probably wouldn’t get published today. ( )
  Hagelstein | Jun 10, 2021 |
I hate the cover of this book. I fully expected to read a few pages, think the same of the book itself, and move on to something else. Instead, I loved this book. It's a hoot! No murder here. Just spies and bureaucracy and disinformation and fun. I need to find more books by Bob Cook. ( )
  y2pk | Dec 17, 2016 |
This is a gem of a book. Great characters, intricate plot as well as funny. ( )
  Condorena | Apr 2, 2013 |
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A humorous debut spy novel for fans of Ross Thomas, featuring a Cold War MI6 intelligence analyst who uses rumors of a leak to defer his imminent layoff. "There's a recession on, you know." With an unemployed son and a baby on the way, these are not words that Michael Wyman wants to hear, particularly not from his employers, the university where he's a professor of philosophy, or the British secret service for which he's worked for 30 years. And he most particularly doesn't want to hear them from both employers at once, accompanied by the information that he's being laid off without a pension. Happily, a miracle is at hand, in the form of a Communist spy burrowed deep in the highest reaches of British intelligence. An East German defector can identify the spy, thus safeguarding national security and protecting the government from crippling embarrassment. He is willing to give up the information, but only to one man. At fifty-six years old, Wyman has one last chance to get back in the game . . . and get out on his own terms. Praise for Disorderly Elements "A delightful and clever first novel with a fast-moving plot, extremely witty dialogue, and a style that combines the best of espionage fiction with a "sting" of classic proportions." --Library Journal "The writing is unusually alert, and it is hard to believe that Disorderly Elements is a first novel. Mr. Cook's 56-year-old Michael Wyman is one of the more unusual heroes in espionage fiction." --The New York Times "Witty, irreverent, and tremendously amusing." --Liverpool Echo (UK) "Spy fiction has a splendid new recruit." --The Observer (UK)

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