December 2017 Non-fiction Biteback Publishing

The Man Who Was George Smiley: The Life of John Bingham Michael Jago


Paperback | Dec 2017 | Biteback Publishing | 9781785902970 | 320pp | 198x128mm | GEN | AUD$19.99, NZD$24.99

Nobody who knew John and the work he was doing could have missed the description of Smiley in my first novel.' John le Carré

Investigator, interrogator, intellectual hero — biographer Michael Jago traces the life of the remarkable and engaging John Bingham, the man behind John le Carré's George Smiley.

The heir to an Irish barony and a spirited young journalist, John Bingham joined MI5 in 1940; his quiet intellect, wry wit, and knack for observation made him a natural. He took part in many of MI5's greatest wartime missions — from tracking Nazi agents in Britain to Operation Double Cross that ensured the success of D-Day — and later spent three decades running agents in Britain against the Communist target. Among his colleagues his skills were legendary and he soon became a mentor to many a novice spy — including one David Cornwell, later known more widely as John le Carré.

Bingham, too, was an innovative writer; he perfected the  psychological thriller, marrying cold objectivity with an explanation of the darkest reaches of human behaviour. His early novels were applauded but, for all his success, Bingham struggled to match the fame of the man he had inspired. Drawing on Bingham's published and unpublished writings, as well as interviews with his family, Michael Jago skilfully tells the riveting, yet poignant tale of the man who was George Smiley.