I spy the wisecracking master of the thriller | Letters
2026-03-20 - 17:39
Henry Sherman and Phil Coughlin celebrate the wit and skill of Len Deighton Your fascinating article (Len Deighton, spy novelist and author of The Ipcress File, dies aged 97, 17 March) and obituary (17 March) on Len Deighton refers to the wisecracking dialogue in his famous early thrillers. His descriptions were also often very funny. In Funeral in Berlin, for example, he wrote of Charlotte Street that it “runs north from Oxford Street and there are few who will blame it”. The 1966 paperback edition of the novel begins with a spoof autobiography, in which this working-class author is described as the eldest son of a governor-general of the Windward Islands who has an “uneventful education at Eton and Worcester College, Oxford”. His “likes” are listed as “being under the bonnet of a vintage motorcar, public bars, ballroom dancing and cricket”. It was electrifying to encounter this as a teenage reader in the 1960s. Henry Sherman Teddington, London Continue reading...