Thursday, 26 January 2017

The John Le Carre story


The world of spying in the national interest is well documented on film book and documentary. I have been a great admirer of the work of the writer John Le Carré who until reading his authorised biography by Adam Sisman, (published by Bloomsbury for £25) I was unaware that his birth name was David Cornwall and that his half-sister is the actress Charlotte Cornwall who I first admired in the TV series the Rock Follies.

I have his books - Smiley’s People (also TV DVD and audio book), The Honourable Schoolboy and audio book, Tinker Tailor Solder Spy (also TV DVD & audio book), The Russia House with the film DVD, The Constant Gardener(and film DVD) and The Mission Song; I have the DVD of the TV series- The Perfect Spy together with the rest of the BBC audio books collection - The Secret Pilgrim, Call for Dead, The looking Glass War (with film DVD), The Murder of Quality and The Deadly Affair (with DVD film), together with that of The Tailor of Panama. I also saw the TV series of the Night Porter, and then came A Delicate Truth which begins with a mission to the land of my parents and their families, Gibraltar and which I listened to as a book at bedtime on the BBC. I have seen Our Kind of Traitor and A Most Wanted Man in Theatre and ordered the DVDs because of this writing and which for me is the most haunting of all his works because of the performance of Richard Burton- The Spy Who Came in from the Cold where I have the film DVD and audio book). The BBC has just announced it is to make a new series based on the book. I have seen all the films in theatre and on TV, some several times.

One Sunday Times headline on January 15th (2017) was The Spy Left out in the Cold.  The article suggests that the Trump dossier is a black ops project of a known but unnamed wealthy Republican who wanted to stop Tump gaining the Presidential nomination for his Political Party.  He used a Washington firm of former investigative journalists which sounds more like Exaro News than Mark Thomas Williams and his Associates, who sub contracted to a former senior MI6 Russia expert, heading the Russia desk at one point, and who had established an arm’s length free enterprise service with another senior colleague. One former CIA chief who has gone through the dossier is on public record of saying a little of the content appears accurate, some does not and the majority is unknown but in total it is the kind of initial raw data based on intercepts, informant’s beliefs, rumours and gossip which then requires rigorous testing. The Sunday Times article argues that the individual. who is named and background reported, has gone into hiding and had worked for the British government in Russia and was head of the Russia desk when Litvinenko was assassinated in London and has since had a vendetta with President Putin which one suspects is long standing given the record of other Cambridge graduates being recruited to the British Service, then working for the Russians and spending chunks of their lives as political refugees. I now fear for the man in question given the likely response of the Trump when he controls the CIA from Friday, although I fear more for Edward Snowden when Trump has his first summit with the Russian former spymaster leader. I still do not understand the way Russia has been painted as our number one enemy when like Trump I believe the long-term threat comes from China, with its economic as well as potentially offensive military power and an unequalled totalitarian system capable of world domination at a time and manner of its choosing. While Trump has British roots, it is at least a decade since the USA wanted out from its European defence involvement and commitments to concentrate on the Pacific rim as any military and geopolitical strategist of international renown will explain if one cares to ask.

It is the issue of fiction mirroring reality, often revealing more significant truths, that has interested me since first becoming the subject of MI5 surveillance in 1960 and where I have always had suspicion that that a female friend whose murder in 1963 has remained unsolved appeared to possess more information about what happened at Holy Loch in 1961 than I would expect an Admiralty secretary, as she claimed, could be expected to know.

The book opens with a quote by Scott Fitzgerald about writers being different people in search of a single identity with one implication that if one has a fully integrated personality one would get on with the business of experiencing life and not sit in a room living through the creations of the mind.  I approached the reading and writing about David Cornwall John Le Carré with the question are spies made or created? I have also considered if the implications of leading one or more lives secretly, and is something which spies have in common with the actor. I have also tried to remember the changing context of work and life over 80 eighty years, with David Cornwall born in 1931 and myself in 1939. A major part of the work deals with the sources for the books and their characters, the impact of becoming an international literary superstar and the interesting people this life has brought him into contact.  There is also the question can the restless spirit, the new and frequently exciting experience junkie ever settle to everyday life, domesticity and the realities of aging?

Adam Sisman is the third attempt to get Le Carré to disclose the story of his life. One attempt was by Graham Lord, Literary editor of the Sunday Express for two decades and whose published work includes the lives of John Mortimer, Joan Collins, David Niven, James Herriot and Arthur Lowe.  Books about writers, politicians, sports and other personalities tend to attract a limited audience, divided between those who respect and admire the individual as a role model and who want to know something of the private person, or hope to gain knowledge to help in achieving a similar ambition and those who enjoy reading about scandal and bad example. The available information suggests that Mr Lord had obtained material which if published would cause upset to those Le Carré cared about and fortunately he was in position to employ lawyers to provide protection. Whatever Lord knew he took to his grave when he died of liver cancer at the age of 73 in 2015, the same year the Sisman biography was published. I wonder if he lived to the read the book?

The writer Robert Harris (Fatherland) obtained a contract to write the story on the understanding it would not be published until Le Carré death and is reported (in the Telegraph in 2011) to have devoted months, creating 30000 words of notes, spending one day with David’s first wife returning letters to the author when she died in 2009

Sisman admits he had a grand time spending several days with David arriving around 11 am, breaking off to eat and drink at a local Inn and then work on until a “fortifying drink” before departing and was provided with an extraordinary long list of people to be contacted which matches that provided by Lady Thatcher coupled with the same promise not to interfere or exert influence on the work.

When enjoying the brilliant BBC TV series production of Le Carré’s A Perfect Spy, I became aware that this was based on his early life, his engaging but middle class ‘crook’ of a father whose behaviour drove his mother to abandon her children when they were primary age school boys.  Ronnie Cornwall, a superstar conman, appears to have led one of the most extraordinary lives I have encountered given his life style and contacts, attractive to women and investors he also appears to have done great harm to others about which he appears never to have openly repented and I read with interest to see how his death affected his younger son.

Sisman begins the work with a cautionary note explaining that it was difficult to substantiate some of the Le Carré’s memory and family legend about their childhood experiences, but it is evident that his father’s charm and ability to impress attracted his mother offering a way out from the restricted and boring life led by many daughters of the well-off middle classes who were expected to live chaste lives at home before a suitable marriage could be arranged. The provision of domestic help within the household and the employment of a nanny to take responsibility for the chores of upbringing meant that his mother was not equipped to be a wife and mother expected to undertake all the demanding and tiring tasks herself and it is there is also evidence that she quickly became aware of his wondering eye and the willingness of other women to respond.

Whether she would have accepted her situation if this had remained the position, a common one for many women between the two World Wars, remains speculation as her husband established himself as a leading member of the local community, invited to join the Brotherhood, a member of the Chamber of Commerce and an active Rotarian also becoming the first President of a local Round Table. He enjoyed a fine lifestyle of eating out at good restaurants, drank brandy and whisky by the quart, smoked large cigars, stayed at the best hotels, entertained generously and lavished presents.  The problem was this was based on other people’s money.  When debts accumulated, he commenced to move his family for fresh starts in new communities, but eventually he went to prison and became bankrupt and his wife was forced to return with her sons to her parental home. Eventually the situation became too much and she ran off and remarried leaving the two boys with their father. This devastated them leaving lasting scars.

Sisman also reveals, unsurprisingly it must be said, that the father had a dark side possessive and controlling but also reveals early on in a footnote that sometimes when he returned home drunk he would get into bed with his son and start to play with him as he might with his mother. In a footnote, there is reference to David raising the issue with his half-sister in later life. It is my expectation that the present statutory inquiry covering England and Wales concerned with abuse within and members of national institutions will comment that abuse in a family domestic situations are more common place than generally appreciated, and should also not be confused with sexual awareness and development in childhood, usually involving other children and young people as well as from observing the more open parental behaviour which developed from the early 1960’s.  How any one individual coped with such experiences and whether everyone is affected in a negative way remains to be established but there is also no doubt that tens of thousands in the UK, and millions throughout human world history have been harmed ruining some lives and the cause of a premature ending.

Children whose parents fail to show them love and fail to respect their separate identity often muddle their need to be loved through sexual intimacy with potentially traumatizing experience for them and for their partners There is reference to David developing an emotional attachment to a young beautiful nanny, a refugee from Germany, who he subsequently tried to find when he joined the “Circus” but without success and to an older schoolgirl being attracted to him but then went off with someone else leaving him to write about the experience. 

One outcome of the departure of his mother is that David and his older brother found themselves in a typical authoritarian private bordering school in the era of the forties where headmasters and other staff could physically assault, hurt and harm pupils at will and where I suggest being beaten can have as great a negative impact as being the victim of sexual exploitation by adults and experimentation by peers, sometimes within a family.

Another aspect revealed about his father was also of interest to me his political involvement and attempt to become a Member of Parliament in a wartime by-election, having previously assisted William Douglas Home to win a by-election and whose aristocratic older brother was to become Prime Minister. He withdrew just before the election, under pressure it is suggested by the spokesperson of the Commonwealth Party (independent socialists in the tradition of the syndicalist and cooperative movements). The spokesperson is reported as Peggy Duff who as General Secretary of the CND interviewed me after it was proposed I should become the paid organiser for the London Region after George Clark decided to give up his volunteer role and chief marshal for Aldermaston marches. Peggy had been business Manager at Tribune and on the Aneurin Bevan wing of the Party.

David appears not to have been directly affected by the horror of the war with mention of seeing bombers flying overhead while camping, and having escaped call up his father appears to have viewed the war as a golden opportunity to make money involving his sons when home in some of his enterprises. But the finances of his father remained precarious and having sent his sons to Public schools the fees for him at Sherborne became in arrears. As with many such establishments the emphasis was on becoming leaders with compulsory sessions twice a week in training to become army officers. The regime was one of open windows and cold showers and other character building programmes. A WoW piece of information is that he became friends with one of my political role models, Robin Cook, whose father, an Indian civil servant had died suddenly, and was sent to the school as his mother decided to stay in India. The Labour Minister Roy Jenkins who went on to found the Social Democrats was invited to give a talk to the small Gateshead Fabian Society but only would accept if accommodated in the best Newcastle hotel and provided a meal at the best restaurant.  Robin Cook came based on being given whatever contribution to expenses the group could afford. I had been briefly introduced to Jenkins and future Prime Minister Callaghan at a social event at the Houses of Parliament, I had helped organise with the help of a Member of Parliament to mark the passing of the Children and Young Persons Act 1969.

Financial concerns appeared to end when Ronnie Cornwall moved into the property market owning 4000 houses at one point and having and a stated wealth of £13 million in today’s values but the money was spent as his life style and social status also rose with politicians, aristocrats and senior civil servants counted as associates together with underworld figures and police as was typical for that period. Staggering information was that just before the war he held a party of the visiting West Indian Team and then did so again in 1948 for the Australians with Bradman’s last visit where as a nine-year-old I sat on the grass to witness his last two ball innings at the Oval.  Ration ended just before I left school in 1955, while the boys participating in some of their fathers lavish holidays, including one visit to Paris staying at one of the best hotels.

Sisman discussing the issues with led David to decide to leave Sherborne before his final year, suggesting that there was conflict between the values of school and those of his father’s life. He not only left the school, but home and England and freed from the constraints he became his own man, albeit a young one. He went to Berne in Switzerland and without qualifications registered at the university where he floundered  but persisted and then through a meeting said to have taken place over Christmas he was recruited by a couple  who said they were from the Consular section of the British Embassy and  keen to prove  his patriotism he agreed to attend meetings of left wing student groups and report back especially on the involvement if any British subjects attending and there you have it an example of how the state focussed on the perceived threat from the East, made use of talents of those on extreme right or who had served the Reich, the subject of the excellent BBC  TV drama  Close to the Enemy directed  by Stephen Poliakoff and with Alfred Molina and Lindsay Duncan in important secondary roles alongside the brilliant young actor Freddie Highmore among several others destined for long careers.

The highlight of his year as an infiltrating informant, in addition to becoming fluent in German, was to shake the hand of Thomas Mann. In 1949 with help David went to Germany and West Berlin. One of my uncles served with the army of occupation in Germany at the same time. His wife came back a nervous wreck. I was evacuated to her home during the concentration of VII rockets on the area close to Croydon airport where I lived, staying at their officer’s quarters near Catterick, now the largest military base in Western Europe.  A temporary illness brought Cornwall home and taken to see Marlene Dietrich at the Café Royal. It was another decade before I saw Marlene at the New Theatre Oxford.

In Germany, David had been to Bergen-Belsen and four years after this I had read the official reports on the Belsen and Auschwitz War Crimes Tribunal hearings at the reference Library in Wallington following a recommendation from the Jesuit modern history teacher at the independent Catholic John Fisher School, Purley. While he was to have first-hand experience of the reality of a divided and occupied Germany my experience was in the cinema as I commenced to be taken every Monday and Thursday to see older release as the local cinema within walking distance, going with cousins to see more recent releases over weekends. The film with greatest impact was the Third Man. I have some memory of The Search, the Man Between, Berlin Express and The Heavens above us.

David next important development was Officer training after National Service and directed by the War Office into Intelligence, which he presumed was because of his experience in Switzerland and where at a subsequent visit to St Moritz he had met his future first wife. Sisman draws the reader’s attention that while the future writer was raised at home and school in a male dominating environment his future wife’s experience was one of female control although interestingly her father chased other   women as did Ronnie Cornwall although the similarity ends as Ann’s family had several generations of distinguished service to Britain.

Although lacking basic educational qualification David then set his sights on going to Oxford the end of his National Services. His father is estimated to be spending half a million a year in to-days money and his relationship with Ann progressed with marriage planned. The reference from the Headmaster predicted he would become either the Archbishop or a criminal. The young man had many talents, from poetry to drawing, from fluent German and its culture to a competitive skier and like his father he presented as confident and articulate, patriotic and loyal but also with his own sense of right and wrong and of justice.

I still wonder if I would have been able to have talked myself into reading Philosophy, Psychology and Physiology at an Oxford college as John Beichon, my tutor in Psychology wanted before he took his team at the Institute of Experimental Psychology to the USA. John went on to become Chief Executive at Which, head a London Polytechnic and play an important role in the development of the Open University. My best memory is accepting his invitation to the dining club feast with other university staff who did not belong to a college and where the chief guest a college Master, walked out before the final courses on hearing another guest, a Jazz musician, admit to also running girls in Soho. My contribution was to entertain in the early hours with prison experience stories while he and some of the others played billiards in a room at the top of the Nuffield College tower. I returned to my digs and was very sick from the assortment of wines and other drinks.

It was at Oxford David was asked by the Government if he would pretend to be left wing and spy on his fellow students, as he had done before when a student at the university in Berne. The Official History of MI5 has confirmed the approach of infiltrating left of centre organisations and spying on politicians and trade union activists which was given fresh impetus by the Cold War which developed after armistice 1945. Although the impression given is that he embarked on this with enthusiasm he looked back on doing this with regret.

There are also similarities between Joe Carter, (the Undercover Police officer whose book is separately reviewed) and David Cornwall although the direction in which their lives has taken appears to be very different and where the individual good they did is likely to remain secret and they both must spend the rest of their lives living with the unintended consequences of the roles they performed in the interests of the state.  This is where David Cornwall has been able to work off his occupational life through his fictional writings and to have an authorised version of life which attempts to indicate something of how life and work may have become entwined.

One similarity is restlessness and a resistance to conventional existence and which we know in the instance of David Cornwall-Le Carré this comes from the personality and lifestyle of his father and the devastating impact of his mother walking out on her two children. David left public school early and his expedition to further education in another country with a different language was also short term. There is no suggestion of a military career after national service and that he was able in effect to buy his way into Oxford University although this is no different from the majority whose route is the private school and money. At Oxford, the state came calling and to the surprise of everyone after starting with the good life of the Tory drinking club fine dining Brideshead good life which David Cameron and friends made infamous once more with their rise to power. David Cornwall became an active socialist joining the appropriate university clubs with the purpose of spying on his new comrades.

He was forced to leave because of changes in his father’s financial fortunes, although beforehand on a holiday in Switzerland where it is said he developed a relationship with the priest, historian and rector of Lincoln College, Vivian H H Green who was used to create the fictional character of George Smiley. David Cornwall’s first attempt at earning a living was at a private school in Somerset where the grandfather of his fiancée and future wife was a member of the teaching staff. The couple married in 1954 as I was in my last year at private school, struggling with learning Latin to enter for the sixth form, university and priesthood!  David then was keen to return to Oxford and complete the degree which he did demonstrating the character and determination of a young man with a wife and not having to pretend being what he was not. But was he really cut out to be a school master when he took work again at Eton.  This was not to last long and he was recruited full time to MI5 and then MI6. He was 26 years of age while aged 19 I was coming to end of my spell working in local government in the finance department of Croydon County Borough Council, occasionally playing chess for the social club team and playing a washboard at an annual social. Visits to Cy Laurie and other Soho area Jazz clubs declined and I cannot remember when I first joined the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament.  David was best man for Robin Cook and Robin had been for him and one wonders if he ever spied on him officially.

Interestingly the books author comments that David quickly found that the technical people at MI5 were the creatives which begs the question at what point did the service begin the sophisticated psychological profiling of the 1980’s and at point were tests evolved for use by international finance and business. When he joined, there was no formal training and pay was £1100, still substantial more than the team of ex WW1 and II veterans with whom I had been attached as office junior of Middlesex House one side of the bridge from what is now the purpose-built spy HQ.

In those days those foreign nationals working for the CIA, the Soviets, Mossad who were attached to an embassy were talked of illegals but were also said to have been identified. There was no foreign travel for the masses, and those coming in and out of the British homeland could be monitored, rationing and taking British money out of the country was still controlled. David is said to have disclosed that the man responsible for combatting the soviets arrived at ten popped out for breakfast, returned briefly before a good long lunch with a contact and after a brief repose in the office teatime marked home time. I was also familiar with this kind of behaviour which echoed that of the section head at Middlesex House who also arrived around ten, took long lunches, followed by afternoon naps in his office and left early.

I was also struck by the reported comment of Peter Wright who described the 1950’s as the years of fun. In 1961 when I guess  MI5  opened  a proper file on me after I met a range of  Home Office and Met people at Scotland yard with George Clark to discuss the quarter of million people we hoped would make the last day of the Aldermaston March and I wanted to encourage as many as we could to join us on the first leg of the Direct Action Committee six week march through England before Scotland and direct action  on  and by Holy Loch,  while  I and others  suspected  that Ralph Scheonman who appeared to control Bertrand  Russell  was CIA, planned in secret a demonstration at the American Embassy. He reappeared again during the so called Arab Spring.

David Cornwall is said to have reminded that at the time there was a significant difference between the Home Office led MI5 which was full of middle and some working-class people while the Foreign Office MI6 was middle class to aristocratic.  One also assumes the War Office which carried on until 1964 when the Ministry of Defence first emerged was also more Officers and MI6 than Len Deighton’s hero.  McClean defected in the early 1950’s with Burgess while was not until 1963 and the Keeper of Royal Art was not out until 1979 by Margaret Thatcher soon after she came to power with Harold Wilson using the Royal Prerogative to prevent prosecution and prevent public awareness. 

One of David’s professional interests was the Communist Party of Great Britain where an agent had infiltrated first as a shorthand typist and worked her way to a position of trust which enabled her to pass documents and information to the Service.  The bread and butter work involved vetting those seeking to work directly for government or to or the in-defence industries, referring to a shop steward making application to work for Hawker Siddeley. A postman seen reading the Daily Worker was investigated. It is not clear if David reported his then wife who after seeing the film On the Beach in 1959 immediately joined the CND.

 I cannot now remember if our very small CND group in Wallington, a handful of married couples, plus a teacher who joined without his wife, all parents, also picketed the film when it was shown as the local Odeon although I remember how self-conscious we felt when handing out leaflets standing with a hold a placard in the High Street. By 1960 as his first child, a boy was born, David sat the Foreign Office exam required for joining MI6, while I was in prison at Stafford refusing to enter an oral recognisance not to undertake further Satyagraha civil disobedience enabling with Peter C Brown (Smallcreep’s Day) to plan our opposition to locating Polaris Submarine on the Clyde where a first counter strike would obliterate Glasgow.

David’s new office location was secret to the British Public but a succession of British double agents presumably passed the information to the Kremlin. When recently it is said a Trident carrying submarine on trial before starting another prolonged underwater vigil loss contact with the testing fired unarmed missile understandably sent in the direction east west not to worry the Russia and had to be destroyed, the Government argued could not disclose any details to Parliament  or to the Defence Select Committee of the House of Commons in closed session  because  it was a matter of national security, the White House was confirming the problem had occurred, the details of which would become known if the American Congress or senate set up a  committee of inquiry. The British government decision was in fact political and nothing to do with national security.

As a recruit to the service there does appear to have been the kind of training we have come to now expect from learning to use guns and the ability to kill in unarmed combat with a single blow as well as the skill in recruiting and running agents in other lands together with the ability to live without detection as someone else. This was the sexy spying which evidently David longed for and has been noted did undercover police officer, Joe Carter admits he found his work exciting. David arrived in Germany as I was deciding to either become full time organiser for the London region CND or go to Ruskin College. No sooner had David joined the service that his first novel was published and he was on the first phase of morphing into John Le Carré

David’s role was that of a legitimate Foreign Office representative but interestingly his work was to detect underground Nazi cells at the same time as the British and USA governments were continuing to recruit former Nazis because of their knowledge and skills as well as placing them in positions of power and influence in what was then West Germany. This is the first time I have come across an admission that the secret services were also interested in the activities of the far right as they had been in the left.

This was also a time when the British Prime Minister came to Germany for support for joining the Common Market but our recent allies and defeated foe joined forces to keep us out as they are now wanting to punish when a narrow majority of the population want us to leave. A picture is painted by the biographer of diplomats bemoaning their loss of tribal power and status in the days of the Empress and Emperors with its locked in social life and the winds of sixties change yet to blow but I wonder was there really no drugs, sex and rock and roll? Turning page was the answer as David had to turn to Special branch for suitable addresses when playing host to a group of future German leaders on a visit to London.

David also still had time to write and in 1963 came the Spy who came in out of the cold, the Vassal affair. John Profumo - the Secretary of State for War who brazenly lied to Parliament about his affair with Christine Keeler, her friend, Mandy Rice Davies, aristocratic house party weekends and the death of Stephen Ward. Profumo redeemed what the Establishment considered the great sin of being caught out by withdrawing from public life and working for the Toynbee Hall Settlement in East London just beyond the citadel of capitalism.

Meanwhile I had switched from Politics and Economics at Ruskin to child care social work at Barnett House studying criminology with Nigel Walker then at Nuffield. Ronnie, David’s notorious father turned up at his home out of the still murky blue.  A little while later he left the country and it is suggested perhaps a photo of him and the Krays was a factor.

Th Spy who came who came in from the Cold rocketed David into international writing stardom but his marriage was ending, President Kennedy went to Berlin and committed to American solidarity which continued until the era of President Obama and we shall shortly know the implications of the election of President Trump.  I went on a college study trip to Sweden and the land of Summer with Monika, Wild Strawberries a Scenes of a Marriage. Kim Philby presence in Moscow became public. George Blake was intended to be in the Scrubs for another forty years.

It was at this point in his life that David was under pressure to become Le Carré in more ways than full time when he became teamed up with James Kennaway, the creator of Tunes of Glory and where the film starred Alec Guinness one of Britain’s great screen actors who was subsequently to become George Smiley. Kennaway until his premature death aged 40is portrayed as an indiscriminate a sex addict and as with all addicts the pressure is put on those around to join in. This was the aspect of the book which the Daily Mail featured with the headline emphasis that Le Carré had a relationship Kennaway’s wife and which involved him allegedly telling her that he had only married under instruction of MI5, a means of moving in left wing circles! It can be said that while all power corrupts, the expected lifestyle of those who achieve international success and fame will destroy unless the individual is particularly strong willed and self-disciplined.

Whereas sexual morality remained a subject of strong debate in this period, those with incomes over £15000 faced super tax of around 90% on both sides of the Atlantic were free to find ways to limit their liability and which created the new industry of legitimate tax avoidance. A few years later I attended a social function for a group of Federal, State and County officials from the USA visiting Britain to view the new Social Services of 1971 but their main interest was over the fact that we were dedicated public servants paying our taxation dues whereas they boasted about not paying any tax with one of the best ways to offset the liability by making profit from rented slum housing. One aspects for achieving the same objective was to become in effect stateless, not staying anywhere to pay the required sums with David making his home in Greece for the Summer and Austria in the Winter while he worked out how to cope with being in demand and the money. He became a citizen of the world but a prisoner of the writing celebrity machine with his wife complaining that everyone commanded his time and attention apart from his family.

What interests me in terms of the character of a spy in fact and in fiction is that his attraction to the ‘fast’ life of others continued with his relationship with James Kennaway replaced by a new relationship with the then young conservative politician Alan Clark who was open about his tendency to fornicate with anyone interested irrespective of age and their relationship. Clark is also reported to have been friends with the fascist right. There were others mentioned in the rest of the book whose lifestyle was closer to Ronnie Cornwall than David. I like the way Sisman reveals something of the catalogue of David’s history of infidelities without the kind of prurient and detailed accounting which other contemporaries have compromised under pressure to make their autobiography/biography commercially attractive to the avaricious media.

A constant theme throughout the life story is that of man brought up without the close or in fact any direction from a traditional stereotype mother, housekeeper/wife and yet and a fascination about those who as adults treated women with ruthless disregard with their own gratifications and ambitions predominating.  Le Carré writes an article about Philby who by all accounts was a killer sociopath but needed women to accept and adore as he was. Le Carré is said to have clashed with Graham Green, another spy man writer, over their respective assessment of Philby, the man and his treachery,

While it can be said David, Cornwall had quickly become John Le Carré, the international literary superstar, it is evident he maintained contact with former secret service colleagues mentioning that his former boss Sir Roger Hollis, then under investigation visited his home as a safe house, while another former colleague was used to fact check for several books. While Le Carré also commenced to be courted my other superstars (although Richard Burton’s attempt to introduce the couple to Elizabeth Taylor misfired) of greater interest to me than the invite to join one of the Queen’s get know people in the media eye lunches, is the information that he had contact with the ex-Sherborne school boy who became chairman of the Thatcher think tank. (Centre for Policy studies) whose influence on British economic policy and the balance between public service and private wealth accumulation has been profound.

Le Carré was then entertained to a lunch of 24 by the President of Italy with David having the impression the other guest were members of government and senior people from the intelligences services. I remember once saying to the Director of Social Services of Newcastle after he had been appointed the only non-politician Commissioner to the European Parliament, much to the amazement of local authority associations who had nominated Chief Executives, if he was enjoying eating in Europe’s finest restaurants to which he just said Palaces.

In contrast when Le Carré went to Russia for the first time his suitcase disappeared for two days, his room was searched whenever he was not there. Fortunately, after leaving a visit in the early hours, not knowing where he was or how to get back to the hotel he could wake the surveillance team outside who got him home. In contrast    meeting with post graduates one asked about defining the boundary between individual conscience and social responsibility which is an issue throughout his work and then the students confided they had secretly watched the TV series Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy.  Another event recalled with lasting pleasure was when he had been invited to lunch with the Russian dissident Joseph Brodsky who had been imprisoned in a psychiatric hospital and Siberian hard labour camps just as he was informed he been given a Nobel Prize.

The visit and book about Russia (The Russia House) marked the ending of Russia’s ability to control its empire and like the UK it has taken decades to adjust and seek its new place in a world where China has become the main challenger to the self-appointed world power of the USA.  By the mid 1990’s he was being asked what he could not write about, although as Sisman  has pointed out his subject matter while centred on the Cold War had been wider. Interestingly it is reported that David Cornwall had prepared a list of countries where he anticipated there would be issues which would command international attention including Libya, El Salvador, Cambodia and Angola. Not on the list is what has become the main threat to international stability the rise of religious fundamentalism between Muslims and everyone else. This is not to imply he had not considered the subject but he recognised that for a writer to engage with the subject of religious belief arouses deeper passions than political ideologies in terms of the hold on most people who will accept the imposition of a political ideology on the same basis they will accept the power and its abuse by those who able to take and hold power without some ideological pretence.

According to Adam Sisman, David has remained rightly, in my judgement, critical of the decision of Salman Rushdie to first challenge the fundamental beliefs of some Muslims and then to make himself into something of a public martyr, whereas  since those at Charlie Abdo became physical martyrs and as I have suggested at the outset of my  writing on Spies and the world of intelligence gathering the motives and subsequent behaviour of Edward Snowden can be questioned and where his period of stay in Russia has been only recently extended following the election of President Trump.

Just when I reached the point in biography of wondering if there is anything more of interest to me or relevant to my focus Sisman mentions that David consulted his neighbour Anthony Samson whose books on the changing nature of power in Britain I have read since his first work on the subject, Anatomy of Britain, was published and purchased in 1962, with updates in 1965, 1971, 1982, 1992 and 2004.  However, these works now appear parochial in a time of global organisations and global power, especially having just quickly read through the 200 pages on what is presently known on the membership of Le Cercle.

David,  because of having become Le Carré, moved legitimately among circles we describe today as fashionable and of the Establishments of many lands who courted his attention, and the opposite of his father who used other people’s money in an attempt to gain favour, and although I believe the book confirms that his inherited personality dramatically reshaped by the departure of his mother was eminently suitable for the double dealing life of a spy, and although some may claim that in total his books are an indictment of the way states of different political structures and  values use people for the personal ambitions and interests of those currently with the power, at the core I gained the impression  of a thinking patriot, a sincere and important writer and a serious man, a  man who understood people and how the world worked.

David’s claim, however that he had only spent five minutes in the Service during a period when a few of those with whom he worked also worked for the Russians and then spent thirty years using his wits to create books about a service he had only a lay person’s knowledge is at best I suggest questionable. He continued to be in demand for social meetings with former and current spymasters from the Soviets, in the USA and home.

The book also describes his journey from child, to adventuring young man, adventuring adult, international literary superstar, and then the challenges and changes of aging, the funerals of parents, a wife, of friends and associates and of what to do about the accumulation of written records and other material, giving hundreds of boxes to the Oxford Bodleian because Oxford remains his spiritual home.  As I read the book I was struck by the extent of his continuing success and my repeated failures but also some similarities which I suspect most those of us who reach the late seventies face, reconciling an increasing long life with the prospects of oblivion but with still things we would like still to be experience and questions to be answered. I am wrestling how best to relocate the many boxes of records and papers acquired overran approaching right decades.

Another consequence of longevity is meeting people whose impressions are based on a time past time meetings, a past association or relayed gossip or in the instance of David confuse Le Carré with being him. Worse still those who have no idea of what we have experienced or achieved or who suffer from questionable amnesia.

Because of my own visits to Gibraltar in 2003 and 2004 and the years of research about the family homeland I was not surprised by the location of A Delicate Truth and hope David has visited and understood that Gib has become the Berlin of the Mediterranean although I wonder if the plan for the Rock to become the new Hong Kong will be adversely affected by Brexit.

The book concludes with the starling admission that David well into his 80’s is now writing with as great a belief and enthusiasm as he ever has, and long this may be so. I hope he will also put pen to paper about the need for the Labour Party to unite in the face of the rise of the far right in Europe and in the USA, and it was also interesting to read that he gave up on the Party during the Blair years voting again in 2015. I wonder what he makes of the approach and policies of Jeremy Corbyn?

Monday, 23 January 2017

Undercover by Joe Carter


It was at Oxford Cornwall was asked by the Government if he would pretend to be left wing and spy on his fellow students, as he had done before when a student at the university in Berne. The Official History of MI5 has confirmed the approach of infiltrating left of centre organisations and spying on politicians and trade union activists which was given fresh impetus by the Cold War which developed after armistice 1945. 

A very interesting and informative insight into the one aspect of the work of the Infiltration department of the Metropolitan Police is provided in Undercover published by Century a branch of Random House, (a building where I worked on leaving school in 1955 as an office junior in a branch of the Middlesex County Council Finance Department and which is located close the Vauxhall Bridge with at the other end the iconic HQ building of MI6). Undercover provides one perspective on the way British law enforcement attempted to encounter the development of international crime which as previously mentioned matched the development of international finance and general business which commenced to be executed in the 1980’s to bypass the controls and sanctions of individual states and their government whatever their political systems.

The book also provides insight into many of the same issues in the  authorized biography of  David Cornwall/John Le Carré so it is an appropriate point to break from his story to first consider the world of Joe Carter, who as a new young recruit to the police in London became bored and jumped at the opportunity to first undertake undercover work in addition to normal duties after recruitment to the Criminal Investigations department, and then became full time, whereas in the instance of David Cornwall he quickly became an international literary superstar, although it is not clear me when he fully moved from the day to day reality into the world of fiction or the extent  to which he  ever moved from a  kind of non-fiction reporting into full creative fiction, including using for a time one former service boss to undertake fact checking for his literary works.

There are several ways to view Joe Carter’s book the book which in the first part provides insight into the workings of the police and the ways of policemen and then on the life and implications of spending a year living with someone of the  opposite sex undercover officer away from his own family, and overall the  book can be regarded as an apology to his family, and also to some of the criminals he befriended, and where at times it can be said he enticed into undertaking more specific wrongdoing and which in turn leads to questions of means justifying the ends, and  as a declared on commencing the  overall writing, I  believe is justified in specific circumstances involving national security and crime detection.

The present Prime Minister, when Home Secretary, established an independent statutory inquiry into undercover policing at the same time as the Inquiry into past crime against children involving national institutions and other  national bodies was converted into a statutory Inquiry because of issues arising from the infiltration of organisations  which might pose a threat to the state but which are not involved in criminal activity  such as a political party, a trade union,  a protest or pressure group, including those challenging aspects of police work.

As a new young recruit, Joe Carter found the assigned duties at the London Chiswick station not what he had hoped for and he found himself under scrutiny because of his failure to meet the expected quota of traffic and other minor offences to keep management content. He was saved by a helping old hand from the Criminal Investigations Department (C.I.D) and jumped at the opportunity of moving out of uniform although he admits he decided not to join Freemasonry which he alleges controlled the CID at that time. He also paints a vivid picture of the drink culture which started from a cabinet in the office and continued across the way at a local public house. One senior officer started at lunch time and was known to regularly consume eight to ten pints.

Joe is also honest that what attracted him to undercover work was the excitement and this included the challenges and the personal risks involved. At first the work was in addition to the day job and one assume overtime rates were paid and having gained promotion, a wife and a child and moving to an area distant from both sets of grandparents, his wife was left alone and in the dark about his double work so that when the opportunity to become full time undercover he lied about family support, such was the attraction of the role for him. He admits to feeling guilt especially when the undercover work involved a week away from day job responsibilities and family.  He admits that the responsibilities of bringing up children as in effect a single parent were demanding and more challenging than his and gives the impression that his wife was or became content with her role.

He then describes the first adventure on the shores of Europe, using the recently opened channel tunnel and filling the car with duty free drink where the focus was on a group of professional criminals responsible for the production and distribution of Ecstasy tablets in Europe. The task involved several trips to Holland and to Spain where those involved were older men with legitimate businesses but who appeared able to spend their day drinking and womanizing. On the visit to Spain they were taken to be entertained at a brothel by very young girls with one allocated to him Asian and very petite. It was one the criminal associates which pressed for a way out and in helping him Joe broke one of the golden rules when working with a colleague, don’t leave that person on their own. The experience reveals something of the challenges facing those who are required to adopt the life style of the professional underworld.

The book then covers his recruitment as a full time officer in days when this appears to have been done by word of  mouth on the  basis of previous contact  and reputation rather than an open competitive and rigorous process over a period of time which is presently being described in a Channel Four documentary series Spies  covering the four weeks of assessment, reminding of the four week residential experience at an International for existing director level candidates seeking to become general managers such as chief executives undertaken in the mid 1980’s and where beforehand there  had been thorough background and personality profiling. 

He also gives a vivid account of the end of the year Christmas social function which used to take place in most work centres where everyone gets drunk over lunch time or from late afternoon into evening and where pent up passions become freed and which can turn into violent and sexual interactions with immediate and longer devastating impact. Before beginning his work as part of the Infiltration Unit he recounts his experience of an activity in Northern Ireland which involved buying a quantity of drugs in a situation where the trade was controlled with guns and paramilitary power. He makes the powerful point that whereas he could function in situations involving professional criminals who used physical violence instinctively as well as calculated the experience in what had become a tribal totalitarian war was on a different level of horror, nastiness and personal insecurity. The reality was made clear when in a bar full of Protestant colleagues in the local force drinking hard at lunch all part of his protection team which included armed protection he was told in the loo that he would in fact be on his own because he was known to be a catholic. The source remains unidentified.

In the same era, I attended a conference on the prevention of drug misuse in Dublin on behalf of an association of chief officers in local government and organised by the British and Irish governments. Such a shadowy figure sat with me at dinner but I listened to what he had to say and listened to what was said at the conference while otherwise keeping a low profile.

At  a social function attended by fellow Directors of Social Services and Councillors, but I cannot remember when,  I was approached in the loo by a colleague who I had never met  before who introduced himself and said you are a left footer (which I had been  as a child  but was no longer) and I then worked in  an area of Tyneside where at one point  leaflets were circulating advising voters to only support Fenian Labour candidates, an area where there used to be an annual Orange march and the Order still shares a building with the Tory Protestant and Unionist Club. Yesterday while on a search for a business I drove past the Mosque in South Shields, when Mohamed Ali had a marriage ceremony in the same month that the Queen visited during her Silver Jubilee year. I noted for the first time in the forty years that I have worked and more recently lived in the town the existence of another Unionist club.

It is, of course, all a matter of degree of threat, and separately I will be writing about published material on the crime families which engaged in a bloody civil war on Tyne and Wearside over control, and where family honour and integrity governed as anywhere. In the first reported assignment, Joe Carter enters the world of Albanian Drug suppliers where he warned that any form of treachery would be dealt with by the family and generationally if necessary. There is then disclosure of the impact of such roles on individuals and the need to have someone independent skilled and in listening, supporting but also the limitations of this and importance of building up survival self-reliance and where I suggest  that while selection and assessment are important, those responsible for recruitment have to put the interests of the state first and that casualties are inevitability, My approach, in the world I inhabited, has always been to ensure that I was always frank about risks  and likely consequences and that if I was asking someone else to go over the top, the individual knew that  I was also leading from the front and taken the main burden of risk. The author the tells how he told his son aged sixteen what he did and his son’s relief as a friend had suggested that his dad was not a detective but had all the appearance of being a drug dealer which is what became for a whole year at one point.

The book then moves onto a subject which has become one of the reasons the independent statutory inquiry into undercover policing has been established- the extent which such individuals are required or develop sexual attachments which lead to the creation of second marriages and families, and in this instance to become the partner of another female undercover officer who worked alone in a challenging environment and where a criminal boyfriend which provide both security and progress the project. It is having this point there is need to introduce a reality warning that clearly anyone writing about such experience will have had the work vetted to ensure ongoing service methods are not compromised and that the anonymity of the actual work and convictions cannot be compromised.

I am reminded of my unsuccessful career as an office equipment salesman for a major international company where working in central London in the city we had to start work calling at offices up to 5 business machines then graduated to those up to 25 and over this a small group attempted to gain contracts with the larger firms. Thus, our undercover officer was involved in the purchase of a kilo or two of cocaine and therefore in the middle of the chain.  However, sums of £25000 in cash were required for trading and the flash lifestyle required involved expenses to purchase the latest fast car, fashionwear, tip doormen £50 or £100 to get space and be looked after and to buy champagne with a little discount for getting ready for drinking half a dozen. In terms of the main operation recounted there was talk of making a million within the year, which understandably could make some question if they were in the wrong job.

Because of his abilities and success, he became a leader of others, a trainer and an internationally appreciated expert. Feeling myself to be different, from early childhood I have always been interested in how others lived whether, teenagers, couples, parents and now other oldies, and for a time considered most people normal until through my work I understood that everyone feels that way at some point and experiences situations and challenges for which they are not equipped and find themselves tested after which lives can be traumatised with long term damage and in some instance destroyed. The most significant aspect of the book comes at the end when having recounted what his life was about and the impact it had on his family, he attends the funeral of a colleague who worked undercover in the attempt to stop and apprehend paedophiles. I have no time for those, especially the politicians who bear down hard on the individuals who cross the line when working for and in the interests of state or make mistakes which adversely affect the bystander, while government, parliament  and other state institutions work with and tolerate those who now make billions exploiting and destroying people in their thousands and tens of thousands and as we daily see in places such as Syria and Aden,  and a few make billions from millions.

The story of Joe Carter is important because I suggest it shows  great insight into the reality of the ordinary men and women who join the police or enlist in the armed services and are recruited to serve their country by doing  unconventional work  behind the scenes working with those only interested in developing their own power and wealth  by any means without disregard for the harm which they do, using  people, destroying the lives of others and this includes their families.  There is no justification for tolerating these people and while it is often true that if you take down one crime boss or crew leader others are only too ready to stem in it is essential the state does focus on stopping a s many as possible while at the same time also looking at ways to prevent individuals being drawn into this cycle of evil.

There are many similarities between Joe and David Cornwall although the direction in which their lives has taken are taken in terms of legacy appears to be very different although the individual good they did is likely to remain secret and they both must spend the rest of their lives living with the unintended consequences.  This is where David Cornwall has been able to work off his occupational life through his fictional writings and to have an authorised version of life which attempts to indicate something of how life and work may have become entwined.

Tuesday, 22 November 2016

American Pastoral by Philip Roth


American Pastoral and Arrival are two films released at the end of the same week in November 2016. I saw American Pastoral last showing on Friday 11th Armistice day and given the thoughtful and careful review by the British Institution of film critics  Dr Mark Kermode who admitted he had  not read the Philip Roth novel on which the film is rooted, I was surprised to find that I was the only person in the film theatre when I  arrived, remaining so, enabling the use of the light of my phone to note down questions on the back of the printed e-ticket, having forgotten to return a slim notepad to the inside jacket pocket, used earlier in the day for shopping notes made on a visit to Gateshead to shop and park at Tesco’s and on to Newcastle to collect coffee and buy winkles in the Grainger Market.

Because the film covered subjects of significant personal interest I immediately ordered the novel which I have now read and confirm the appraisal of Mark Kermode that this is a good directorial debut by Ewen McGregor.  I go further and say the film provides coherence to the story and a credibility of character that the book by Philip Roth does not and at which at one level is a well written rant,  bravely  attempting to communicate how at any moment our ideas and  feelings contain all our previous and inherited experiences, but I failed to be convinced that the characters are more than the ideas, views and beliefs of the author although I accept I was confused by the narrative time framework and because of having experienced the film first.

The approach of Mr Roth has much in common with what I understand to be one of the two central themes of Arrival, a multi-dimensional sense of time and which also uses an alien visitation to explain the nature of language and communication in an engaging and entertaining way. Arrival end the first week as top box office and American Pastoral per the British Film Institute was only number 19.

I also understand that American Pastoral is one of several books by Roth in which he uses a character as his alter ego, (that is a second self, different from his normal or original personality). I do not know if this is true as I do not know Roth,  but I  will say   that the starting point of his book is the  proposition  that  many American men believed in the American Dream, that  their nation was God’s special land and the greatest, and their values and standards of the highest order  and  where for many the 1960’s was a period of great awakening, when the Hollywood image of  the second world war was shattered in Vietnam (and as I have recently presented  when covering 25 years of Miss Saigon and the worldwide belief that an entry permit enabled automatic participation in the American Dream of equal opportunity to wealth and power and where the greater the  belief, the  greater the fall). The opening section of the 400-page novel is called Paradise Remembered, followed by the Fall and concludes with Paradise Lost.

I also have a very different but in some respects more important and lasting experience, a live relay from the Royal Opera House in London of the Offenbach opera Les Contes D’Hoffmann, the Tales of Hoffmann and this was followed by two films on Sky TV, Strangerland, a film set in a contemporary  Australian small town on the edge of a desert  and where there are important similarities with American Pastoral, as they are with American Beauty, followed by the delightful Spanish film  with its English  titled Living is Easy with Eyes Closed, aimed at the Oscars best film in a language other than English and which won the  Goya in 2014 for that category and several others. To complete the cultural experience of the past week I went to see Fantastic Beasts in 3D on Friday November 18th.  I also need to write up experiencing the stage musical The Glenn Miller Story with Tommy Steele for the second occasion, this time at the Sunderland Empire, previously, the Theatre Royal in Newcastle, and the films the Girl on the Train and Nocturnal Animals.

I also intend to make time to comment on a brilliant one off documentary about the Tyne Bridge, the moving series of  canal trips by Timothy West and his partner Prunella Scales, the remarkable Planet Earth II naturalist  the latest BBC four Saturday serial The Deep,  Humans and Westworld cover artificial intelligence,  the Missing and child  abduction and abuse,  the Young Pope -what is it about, the interesting Close to the Enemy and the yet to interest, My Mother and Other Strangers, Strictly Come Dancing, The X Factor and the never ending -The Blacklist.

One interesting and challenging aspect of the book American Pastoral is its argument that we can make the right decision choice but this can have devastating life changing consequences. I will say more about the advice a parent gives his daughter, how he responds to an initiative from his daughter, followed by his reaction to meeting an emissary from his daughter and going into the kitchen before sitting down with friends for a meal and where despite the chronology set out in the film I am still unclear of the time frame when attempting to unravel cause and effect. I will also add the appearance of something, or someone is only one aspect of its reality

The main character of the book is not its author who in the form of Nathan Zuckerman, a successful published writer who tells the story of “the Swede”, (Seymour Levov) already a legend from being a great Athlete in American Football, basketball and baseball and a veteran of the second world war and who had attended the same Jewish High school years as the story teller. Nathan admits that he idolised the Swede the American Dream) when attending the same Jewish Newark, New Jersey High School with Jerry the younger of Levov’s two sons and who as a World War II veteran of the Marines took over his father’s quality glove making factory and who married a beauty queen with success graduating from city to state to the Miss America contest staged in Atlantic City, underlining the American Dream theme. The nickname Swede and ”The Swede” remained unclear until the book discloses his name is Seymour and Swede was a  tall blond rock of  a man compared to his short in stature wife and its only towards the end of the book is there reference to their discovery in private of passionate sexuality but which they kept within the bedroom and where sex  is  part of the shattering of his idealism and where how couples present themselves when being sociable with others is very different from the image they  wish to present and have within the marriage.

It was only when reading the book that the thought occurred that that Roth had created the Swede as the American Dream to explain that he too had been an idealist who had set himself great standards to have these shattered by the realities of life. As a young man, I developed an interest in Fundamental Freudianism where everything is based to procreation desire and sex and on aggression, violence and death and on the guilt of having wishes desires which parents, family, the local community, a religion, a church and its leaders, those controlling the one’s country society has declared taboo. I have learned that Roth was brought up in the Jewish belief and cultural system which draws as strong between themselves and as Catholicism of my birth father who I never knew but became a senior priest, my birth mother and my childhood and which there are many in the Muslim world, some Protestant and other religious bodies who also attempt to divide themselves off from others in what is a spectrum of belief within and between religions and which impact on behaviour. The statement there is more which unites than divides is meaningless in this context.

At one level Seymour is presented as a conformist but in one significant passage he declares that the faith and culture of his childhood mean nothing yet it is his Catholic wife who stands up to the father in law over an inquisition about her gather and how the children will be brought up. In this film, this happens in its chronology of events, maturing and individual development, in the book it comes almost at the end. The film uses the unravelling of the story line to engage our attention in contrast to Roth who spits out the key aspects of the story and then attempts to explain leaving the reader to knit everything together and made sense as they wish from their experience.

Although Roth is a war veteran he joined too late to see the blood and guts of war and although in film  (but less I thought)  in the book uses the  black v white rioting of Newark 1967  to  bring out that he is a liberal democrat where the majority of workers at the family owned business are black, the  blood and guts of the rioting is  only alluded, and this is also true for the, Vietnam and the anti-war protests and it is the film that there is the more vivid impact of the bomb which destroys what  we  in England would called the  village store with  post office outlet. The American Dream is a device to cover those who disassociate themselves from the realities of life until it is brought home to them directly. A home break in a car accident or break down, a storm, an expected death all of which I have experienced added to which there are the floods, the earthquakes and most of all the wars and I have met no one who has experienced night after night bombings even as a very young child who not affected, in my instance it was the far of the adults as they prayed with their rosaries which communicated to me and I have still. 

Roth is also not the conformist his younger brother accuses nor is he weak in giving in to pressure from parent or daughter although he respects both parents. So, he agrees to his future wife a Catholic being questioned by the parent, something I experienced when going out with a girl for the first time at the age of 17 and she was16 and in returning to her home from the pictures and invited in and faced an inquisition from mother father (a civil servant) with a bemused older sister who I knew from a cycling club who arranged the date after her sister and come to one of our Sunday outings. My  humiliation was great because the dread question what does  your father do I could only mumble dead  because I did not know and  did not believe the cover story given to me a couple of years before,  was possibly given  an opportunity some years late, but could not cope with at that time and then was told just before I was sixty that he had been a priest, and only to learn from subsequent efforts that he had had been  number  two to a Bishop and acting for the Bishop and  awarded the  O.B.E.

Seymour’s other defiance against parental pleading was to buy a large house in the country with 100 wondering cows and a romping free bull, the Count in a solid Republican community with a Klu Klux Klan history.  Father warns about getting to and the farm to the nearest station in winter and getting to work at the business and Seymour explains about the good train services which goes on into New York with Parlour cars in the morning, the USA first class lounge dining car with bar but on two levels with a small cinema.

The more I age the more I appreciate that how others view as history or an art or entertainment experience set in costume and period, events which have understand from the perspective of having lived through the time, and sometimes with direct experience. Before starting to write I try and check my memory with the available facts.  In this instance, I had not appreciated that Newark. the largest city still in New Jersey state, is a short commuter train ride from central New York about the same distance in travel time as my former five  childhood and young adult homers in Wallington, Surrey from central London when I became an anti-war campaigner a few years before the daughter of the Swede, so the parallel comparison between the reactions of her close and extended family to mine are fresh as I have commenced to write again about my experience and its impact on the rest on my life, and my closed and extended family network.

In book with words, and film through pictures, we gain some knowledge off Newark post second world war when the town had a population of some 400000 but commenced to rapidly drop with the 1967 Race Rioting with up to 80% of the Whites leaving and the 2010 census putting the city total at about 275000. The African origin American population has also dropped from a high of 58% to 52% and with of Hispanic and Latino combining more recent populations from Portugal and Brazil to form the second largest grouping, leaving the Whites at under 25%.  The Democratic candidate for president has won the state since 2000 and did so again this year by a significant majority of the votes casts with the Green Party gaining 1%.

There were 80000 Jews living in Newark at one point, the city where Philip Roth grew up with his parents and based several of his novels many of the successful business merchants, as the Levov’s had already moved away from the city centre concentration of cold water flats, before the 1967 rioting when most pulled out. It is normal hat when first arriving ethnic groups living together in area with privately renting housing is available, quickly establishing speciality food and services, together with junior and high schools.

This is a subject where I have some direct knowledge as seventy percent of the twenty thousand predominantly Catholic population of Gibraltar were required to leave their tiny almost island homeland at the southern tip of Spain as World War II commenced and were sent and lived in neighbourhoods to a number of countries, including one part of London if they did not already have an extended family living in other countries to taken in as happened to mine, coming to England and not to the USA, or North Africa where there were other close relatives. Although I went to a Catholic school the emphasis was on integration as there was no prospect of returning to the homeland when the war ended for my birth mother and six of her seven sisters.

Going to work in central and outer London, then becoming an activist and then going into adult education, I quickly became aware of the singularity of the Jewish world even when families lived in neighbourhoods of mixed ethnicity and this culminated in my sixth decade when undertaking an assessment for allocating funding  to a business enterprise it was necessary to call at home of an applicant whose family was at one end of the Jewish belief and practice spectrum where contact was not allowed with others, and where it was evident the children  came in and out of the room just to see what someone who was not one of them was like and because the applicant was a woman and  could not be in the presence of a male without a chaperone,  her partner was present but declined to communicate directly on religious grounds. This contrasted with a girlfriend of a short time where Jewishness was not central to her being and outlook and to the number who were members or supporters of communism, socialism and activists for against weapons of mass civilian destruction.

The core of the book and film is the relationship between Seymour and his one child at that time, a girl, Merry, who becomes a verbal and direct actionist extremist as a teenager against the Vietnam War, against the system, the everyday of family life and their apparent acceptance of the way everything is. Roth is good at using a sentence to communicate an era or the context opening the second chapter with reminding that after the second world war the USA governed 200 million other people in Germany, Austria, Italy and Japan. Back home in the States and in Britain. In the book, what remains uncertain in the film. What the book, and film does not attempt to do is to explain why Merry normal adolescent rebellion against parental, school and religious authority graduated from nonviolent to violent protesting, a subject with interests me especially as later or she becomes a convert to the extreme end of non-pacifism- Janis and which influenced Gandhi in his activist approach of Satyagraha

The film Strangerland has a very different setting and time but also uses disappearance of a 15-year-old daughter (and her young brother) who appear to have gone off into the Australian desert on Walkabout just as a sandstorm engulfs the area. Walkabout remain a seminal film starring Jenny Agutter who finds herself with her young brother in the desert after their father shoots himself and where they are rescued by an aborigine boy who is undertaking his solo rites into manhood. There is moment in Strangerland where I hoped an indigenous resident would come to the aid of the family and can find both children alive. It is after the two children go missing in that we learn the facts of why the family, he is a dispensing chemist, moved into the town and an extraordinary blunder like that which Seymour Levov makes. We also experience through both films the full extent of their culpability for what happens, in part because of parental denial and the inability of the parents to intervene in a constructive way. Both mothers end up walking into the local town centres naked which says something of their sexuality and guilt although the daughters take very different routes in expressing themselves, reacting to the unbalanced marital relationships and the cultural mind set in which the parents have themselves been raised and appears to them to have accepted without questioning.

The reaction to Jerry Levov’s revelations about his brother is for Nathan to start to revisit the location of the homes, the business of the Swede and to look at press records in the local library. He meets someone he once took on a hayride who as a teenager had refused to let him undo her bra him undo her bra, not because she was sexually shy as such but because if he had become her boyfriend that he would have discovered the nature of the family set up which she did not want others to know. This quickly leads to one of the key passages in the film and which McGregor includes although in a modified version, and centres of the Freudian understanding of the sexual development of girls in relation to the attachments they have with their father seeking genuinely at times to replace their mothers as where it is also not uncommon   for a son to also say to his mother that he will marry her when grows up without understanding the implications of what he is saying.  Roth has the father responding to this situation as most fathers would at that time but also with understanding the potential impact of the rejection on the daughter and moreover also imbuing the daughter with an insight into her general behaviour of pushing things over normal limits with the consequential reactions of those involved.  The problem is that pushing to the limits allowed is normal behaviour and that this another aspect where both sets of parents are found wanting.

In Strangerland, the teenage girl is seduced by a teacher at the school with whom she had developed an emotional attachment, the crush which teenage girls and boys will develop for teachers who are themselves flattered by the attention, if they are not predators on the lookout for such a situation. Freud and several generations of Freudian enthusiasts accepted his argument that the wish of the child for the death of a parent, the death of a parent or sibling or having an embryonic sexual relationship, depending on their knowledge of marital relationships at the time can have just as strong and devastating impact on their behaviour because of guilt than had the situation developed into one of physical reality.

The different between those who think and feel and those who also act, or respond in destructive and often self-destructive ways is my main issue of interest because of my own experiences and have been undertaking research in preparation for rewriting experience in relation to opposition towards weapons of mass civilian extermination.

The first quarter  and first section of the books ends with the daughter as a  rebellious 16 year old, staying out over night with her radical friends, at constant war with her mother who sees the behaviour as adolescent rebellion against everything, using language most foul in order to bring  about  a desired reaction,  the stutter as a weapon, reminding of my own confrontations although I was able to insist on freedom to  as well as freedom from, earning  an income and with a monthly train season ticket which enabled to me to  travel to London at weekends  or stay on after work and where I cannot remember eating much if anything.   However, it is the father, in desperation, fearing his daughter is becoming more and more involved with the activities of the extremists in New York, poses the challenge to her to try and influence the local community and bringing the protesting locally, unaware of how this will be interpreted by the daughter and her friends with disastrous consequence for everyone- the law of the unintended consequence with paves the way to hell with good intentions.

Both book and film focusses on the visit of a young look University student seeking information in the glove making industry and where the Levov family business is known to provide the best handmade gloves in the country. This open the second section of the book headed The Fall. The book quickly reveals the student is an agent for the disappeared daughter whereas in the film only later is the truth self-revealed. I wondered why it was necessary for the history and nature of glove making industry to present in such detail until author explain through Seymour his opposition the approach of profit before everything and cutting corners, using the expression stealing time. The younger brother Jerry accuses his older of only knowing the business of making specialist gloves and when the market drops because of changing custom and overseas production it provides another reason for the world of Seymour to collapse further. It is only after Seymour has taken the young woman through the process of making her a pair of bespoke gloves that she reveals she is an emissary for his daughter with requests that items are brought to a secret location. Rita, the young woman, refuses to disclose where his daughter is, declares that Merry hates him and would like to see him shot.

He defends against inaccurate references to the upbringing of his daughter and she counters his attempt to challenge the accusation that his child murder by referring to the number of civilian deaths which occur because of the bombings by the USSAF and ground forces. He knew he should have reported the contact to the authorities but his wife persuaded him to continue with their only link providing her with a briefcase full of ten thousand dollars in bills. They meet for this in a hotel room where she offers herself crudely and which is also featured in the film. I had a similar experience when aged 21 or 22 with an 18/19-year-old subsequently murdered, which I rejected and which Seymour also rejects, bolts from the room and report to the FBI as I was to do to police after the death.  In the book, we move on five years and accounts of all the bombings and not coming to terms that the daughter has killed three people. Roth reflects on the course of the war and on the trial of a Black Communist Sympathetic Professor at ULCA, Angela Davis’ about the same age as Rita the girl Seymour is confronted by. Later it is Rita who writes telling him where Merry is claiming she had been under the power of Merry and acting as she had directed to the extent she pretends Seymour had used her sexually for Merry to accepted the cash and her continuing involvement.

The book looks back to how the community responded to the allegations with the highlight the disbelief that such a multi-talented school girl who never challenged authority was responsible for such deadly acts.  Someone her school mention she talked a lot about the Vietnam War, lashing out in one instance because of view expressed strongly opposed her own and one of the teachers was said by the FBI to have provided valuable information. There was incomprehension that this has happened to such a family

On the 1st September 1973 Seymour received the letter from Rita in which she says but she cannot cope anymore and his daughter needs urgent medical help. She provides the assumed name and location in Newark advising him to wait outside until she appears. His wife had twice been in hospital because of suicidal depression and she blamed him for marrying her, for having their child when all she wanted to be was a teacher, when being pressured to become a beauty queen but where she did not reach the final ten at Miss America contest in Atlantic City. We learn that in 1969, two years after her daughter disappeared she was back in hospital coinciding with an invitation to the 20th anniversary of leaving High School. He funded a trip to Geneva for facial surgery but this was not for him or her it is later revealed. The farm and grand house are sold and something smaller in a different area acquired, and his where several new versions of what are given, we are also taken further back in book and in film to events immediately after the bombing when he had gone to see the owners of the store and post office concession and the widow of the man killed who understood that the impact would be worse on the parents as they had a supportive family and community to help her and her child to cope.

He waits outside the Cat and Dog hospital dilapidated building where his daughter has been said to work in what had become a grim part of the city. She come unrecognisable in terms of clothing   body project and her covered face but it is her. She has become an adherent of the ancient Indian religions which I had also considered but came to quickly understand aspects   were not for me. Jainism is a total way of life based on passive inaction and a belief that all living things are beings with souls and with those who fully embrace accept poverty, chastity, truth and honesty without exception and the level of renunciation and noninvolvement which most find impossible to achieve or maintain. It is not only the opposite of what she had but what for a short while she has become. He found her condition distressing, especially her acceptance of squalor and deprivation. She had been there, close by for six months.

She tells the story of what happened after she admitted carrying out the bombing. She had spent three days at the home of the speech therapist who had arranged for her to enter an underground of places and people, some fifteen aliases in two months. She details how she became Mary Stoltz working for a year in the kitchen of an old person’s home. A minister who had befriended advised her to immediately sending to a commune in another part of the country but arriving in Chicago on her way to Oregon, she was raped, held captive and robbed. The film does not detail more, or if it does I do not remember.

She gets a casual job, was raped in another situation. She made her destination Oregon and became involved with two further bombings. She killed three people. She fell in love with a woman at the commune. The woman was married and a situation developed where she to leave. She worked in a potato field and commenced to learn Spanish planning to travel to Cuba, believing a revolution would never take place in the USA, she made her way to Florida. She had become parotid about the FBI on the lookout for her and came across an old woman begging who taught her trade and with whom she moved in until the woman died. She had commenced to learn about religions at the public library.

Hiss reaction to her story was deny she his daughter because his daughter could not have done the terrible things she had admitted.  He could not bear her as she was and pleaded with her to go with him whereas she pleaded to be left alone as she was. The book and the film then covers the impact of the riots on his factory, the neighbourhood he community. Seymour also tells his brother he has found his daughter and what she had done, the brother confronts Seymour with the reality of having become some the product of his father, the country and its system without having a separate identity with his daughter challenging in every way that she can, forcing him to accept the reality of who he is. What Roth appears to be demonstrating is that one brother has been passive, accepting what happens, until challenged in some fundamental way while the other has always been aggressive, accept my as I am or not at all with the implication that our basic inherited nature will only change when challenged by something out of the ordinary or by someone. Whether Roth had knowledge about how new humans are created, their gene structures, the neurology of the brain which I have only now commenced to learn the language to be able to understand, is a good question

But as fundamental to this, that there are significant differences to the platitude there is more that unites than divides is what seems to me the message of this book  is that education and parental upbringing should be about enabling each human being  to develop a sense of individual identity and thought process which does not accept what they given, including by parents and teachers without questioning and challenge and this today applies most of all to politicians and  mainstream media, and to experts  who  pretend objectivity, and  I also include the pure scientist in this who pontificates on subjects broader than their area of study. The phone exchange between the two brothers ends when Jerry reminds that Seymour had been an instructor in the Marines but still could not cope with the brutality of what could be human behaviour, his daughter had become a murderer and the reasons were only secondary in determining how society should treat her once guilt has been proved or in this instance admitted.

The third section of the book is headed Paradise Lost back at the time of the Watergate hearings which they would listen to and reflect on at the end of day to when they and the cows and then farm was being sold more ruminating on has been and which is also where I argue that one of the simplistic message of Arrival is a major feature of this important work of fiction because Roth repeatedly makes the point that when thinking and reacting to the present  we drawn what  has happened  before not as a chronology but in terms of relevance to our mood, our feeling, the person we have been, are and still hope to become.

But another aspect of the he books which is again explored is hate, the hate of things not understood, threatened, changing, he same kind of hate which his daughter and her associate had expressed. I now turn to two of the events mentioned in book which centre on our sexual awareness as children, of our sexuality as adults in relationships, to sex as a means for procreation, as giving and submitting to power as well of personal enjoyment plus the sense of betrayal leading to violence which can also result. I was unsure at first of why Roth included the situation where after Seymour and the daughter spends time together on a camping expedition on advice of a talking therapist she acts out the Freudian urge to replace her mother as his wife and he understandably is horrified and his responses crushes her although she has the insight and ability to communicate to admit that she tends to go too far. It his failure to understand and protect which appears to affect him more when learns she has been raped on two separate occasions. 

In Strangerland, the daughter becomes the town anybody’s who takes an interest which leads father to acts of continued aggression against the teacher who seduced her and those he finds have used in her the town. Just as it fathers who tells the daughter to protest within the community, the father in Strangerland admits at the end of the film to his wife that he had watched her go off at night with the younger brother who tends to go night walking and decided not to intervene to teach her a lesson, hence the great panic when the dust storm arrives, the son is fund barely alive   the daughter is not.  In American Pastoral, we know the daughter survives as she attended the funeral of her dad dead from prostate cancer aged 67 whereas in Strangerland we are left with the assumption she has perished from lack of water and sub alone in the desert. The audience reaction to both films, I assume American Pastoral for as mentioned I saw it alone, is to sit and working through their emotional reactions when the credits roll.  By contrast in Living is Easy with the eyes shut both the adolescent school boy who runs of from his dictatorial father and a young pregnant girl are known by the audience to be safe with prospects for a potentially good life when the film ends.
 In American Pastoral Seymour walks into the kitchen as they prepare to sit down for a meal with friends to find that the man from one of the couples is taking his wife and from her comments this is not first instance.  Later he learns she had the expensive facelift in Switzerland to please this man who she runs off and marries.  He backs off then but not when he finds that the talking therapist at the same meal with her husband had looked after his daughter for three days immediately after the bombing. She explains that because of the professional relationship she was bound by secrecy even when she knew from the TV what the girl was alleged to have done. What hurt Seymour most is that she did not tell him, the woman with whom Seymour had an extra marital affair, he later remarried with two sons. His back and white father could not understand his children in this respect, especially Jerry who has divorced three times with four wives all nurses and with an increasing gap in their age difference. What children  always find difficult to accept from their parents is the reality of life compared  the fairy stories of childhood  until he children  themselves grow  and have children of their own, and then sometimes too light they begin to see that their parents were always doing their best  but the best is too often not good  enough .I was struck  by this  thought to day when reading an article in Times by Melanie Phillips  headed Royal sense of duty may die with the Queen with the sub text that our present head of state could be the last to believe in a  higher cause than family or personal desires. I think not given the vast numbers of everyone everywhere try and balance their duty to themselves and their families with concern and action for tihers.