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Our man in Havana
 
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Our man in Havana (Hardcover)

by Graham Greene (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (39 customer reviews)

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1 new from CDN$ 76.66 10 used from CDN$ 9.34

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Product Details


Product Description

Product Description

Mr. Wormold, a vacuum cleaner salesman , was short of money. His daughter had reached an expensive age — so he accepted Hawthorne’s offer of $300-plus a month and became Agent 59200/5, M.I.6’s man in Havana. To keep the job, Wormold pretends to recruit sub-agents and sends fake stories. Then the stories start becoming disturbingly true. --This text refers to the Paperback edition.


From the Back Cover

“Comical, satirical, atmospherical.” –Daily Telegraph

“Graham Greene had wit and grace and character and story and a transcendent universal compassion that places him for all time in the ranks of world literature.” –John Le Carré --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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Customer Reviews

39 Reviews
5 star:
 (18)
4 star:
 (17)
3 star:
 (2)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:
 (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (39 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars The Spy Who Invented Himself, May 6 2004
By Bill Slocum (Norwalk, CT USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I first read this book several years ago when it was titled "The Tailor Of Panama" and written by John le Carré. I finally realize why I enjoyed that earlier book so, in that le Carré modeled the work so directly (and with proper acknowledgement) on this 1958 masterpiece.

Le Carré's effort isn't bad, but its often-maudlin tone detracts from the humor of the situation. Not so Greene, who subtitled his book "An Entertainment" and meant it. He doesn't waive all suspense and tragic overtones in search of punchlines; one of the chief joys of this book is how well it works as a spy novel. But unlike heavier Greene works like "The Power And The Glory," "Our Man" plays in a kind of high-adventure, almost Ian Fleming kind of way.

Greene's novel concerns a struggling British vacuum salesman living in Cuba, Jim Wormold, recruited by U.K. espionage to provide intelligence on the local scene as it becomes a hot spot in East-West relations. Wormold can't resist their money, but decides that instead of giving honest information, he will make up stories with the "assistance" of a stable of recruited agents he invents on the spot.

"Just lie and keep your freedom," advises Wormold's best friend, an old German doctor with a mysterious background named Hasselbacher. "They don't deserve the truth...They have no money, except what they take from men like you and me."

So Wormold does exactly that, for the benefit of his blossoming daughter, the flower of his heart whose faith in him and God he seeks to preserve though he doesn't share either belief. The result is a tangle of tall tales about alcoholic pilots and Mata Hari (...) he basically makes up as he goes along.

At one point, he wonders whether he pushed his luck when he presents the plans for one of his vacuum cleaner models as a secret Soviet base, but he's hopelessly addicted to his fiction almost as much for the pleasure of creation as for the financial reward: "It astonished Wormold how quickly he could reply to any questions about his characters; they seemed to live on the threshold of consciousness - he had only to turn on a light and there they were, frozen in some characteristic action."

Wormold is playing a dangerous game; in addition to snookering his own country, he is also attracting the notice both of the rival camp and the Havana police in the intimidating person of Captain Segura, a rumored torturer who covets Wormold's daughter. But in oddly detached fashion, perhaps because his life lost much of its purpose when his wife left him years ago, Wormold improvises his way through with cosmic aplomb.

There is a deeper meaning to this book, based on Greene's belief that neither East nor West deserved any special allegiance during the Cold War. One character puts it this way: "They haven't left us much to believe, have they? Even disbelief. I can't believe in anything bigger than a home, or anything vaguer than a human being."

It's possible to take issue with Greene's value-neutral attitude, but his execution is so deft, and his style so entertaining, that you can't help but admire him. "Our Man In Havana" is a thoroughly mesmerizing comedy that manages to impart some subversive truths about where the moral lines exist between serving one's government and serving one's fellow man.

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5.0 out of 5 stars A counter balance to the banality of Ludlum, Clancy et al, April 19 2004
By jaljohnson (Los Angeles, California USA) - See all my reviews
What a great book. I hadn't read it in ten years, and had forgotten most of the details; the plot itself is revealed in the first few pages, so no matter that I could remember it.

It involves, of course, a vacuum salesman -- who becomes a spy, sort of. He is recruited by British Intelligence, and makes money by "recruiting" imaginary agents and sending them on expensive fictional missions. Brillliant, farcical and more illuminating and entertaining than a hundred Ludlum-type "thrillers."

The amazing thing about Greene is his ability, in the context of his stories, to capture the essential humanity of his characters and place it in writing, and to convey deeper meanings and truths which underly their movements and plot.

Greene's tale might seem preposterous -- but it isn't. Before Pearl Harbor, the Japanese employed an agent who clearly fabricated reports, and proposed means of sending secret signals from a boat he didn't own, and a house he leased to naval officers. In truth, intelligence agencies have suffered legions of failures and even the best of them made egregious mistakes with similarly disastrous consequences. Greene's book is not merely an amusing tale of a few people, it is an allegory and expose of the fallacies of secret organizations, and a biting commentary about the extremes to which they can go to protect their own -- rather than the public's -- interest. Greene, to be sure, must have witnessed some of the bungling, and underlying his farce is a warning and a commentary.

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3.0 out of 5 stars Too sly, too understated for it's own good, April 7 2004
By A Customer
This book is well-crafted, and the premise, as judging from the back dustjacket alone, is intriguing.
And I liked it...sort of.
It seems to me this book was written a little too slyly, with a little too much understatement. I mean, when you get a ridiculous premise like this, why not play it up? Have the characters' dialogue be more outrageous, have them be more eccentric. All the characters in this book talk to each other in very believable conversations, but they are rather mundane--a little too much like real life.
I guess what I mean is, this book attempts to mix humor in with a very serious, dramatic subject; but in attempting both, it completely succeeds at neither.
It is too serious, too matter-of-fact, for comedy; it is too laced with slyness to be dramatic.
If you think of the masterpiece of the same genre, of the same century which DID mix the two quite successfully, CATCH-22 by Joseph Heller, you will see quickly how Heller succeeded where this book stalls out: Heller allowed for much more eccentricities of his characters, in both dialogue and mannerisms; Heller also allowed for outrageous, unbelievable scenes now and again, laced in with some really serious matters.
Greene plays it more conservatively, and as a result, this book comes off as well-crafted, but largely insipid next to the classic of this genre. It just didn't hold my attention like I was hoping it would.
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Most recent customer reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Wickedly entertaining
I went into OUR MAN IN HAVANA with very few expectations. I was under the vague impression that it was a thriller of sorts and I somehow knew that there had a been a film made... Read more
Published on Mar 8 2004 by Andrew McCaffrey

1.0 out of 5 stars Graham Greenes novels are boring and suck to say the least
One of the most boring books ive ever read in my life. I see why his novels weren't allowed in the U.S.
Published on Oct 28 2003 by Erich Johnson

4.0 out of 5 stars A Farcical Tale of Cold War Espionage
It is the age of The Bomb, the Cold War, and the perceived threats of Soviets in Cuba. Against this backdrop, Graham Greene presents his readers with a dark, yet farcical and... Read more
Published on Oct 24 2003 by ransome22

5.0 out of 5 stars Satirical spoof. I found myself giggling throughout.
This 1958 novel was a complete surprise to me. I'd read three books by this author before and found them dark and introspective. Read more
Published on May 9 2003 by Linda Linguvic

4.0 out of 5 stars Liked everything except the name Wormold
Our Man in Havana by Graham Greene is a witty tale of Jim Wormold a vacuum cleaner sales man living in Cuba with his Catholic daughter Milly. Read more
Published on Jan 8 2003 by Kyle Johnson

5.0 out of 5 stars Greenes most hilarious and most mordant entertainment.
Gleefully combining the raucous humor of absurdity with slyly subtle wordplay and caustic satire, Greene entertains on every level, skewering British intelligence-gathering... Read more
Published on Nov 13 2002 by Mary Whipple

4.0 out of 5 stars Great Greene!
Our Man in Havana by Graham Greene is a twisted spy tale that skewers the spy genre with humor and Greeneï¿s classic ability to demystify through the wry metaphor. Read more
Published on May 21 2002 by Stacey M Jones

4.0 out of 5 stars The Intriguing Story of Vacuum Cleaner Salesman
So, I picked up this book at a flea market in Obergnigl-a small suburb of Salzburg, Austria. The only reason that I bought it was because the inside cover told the reader that... Read more
Published on May 8 2002 by Molly Zoe

5.0 out of 5 stars And to say I was afraid I wouldn't like it...
Our Man in Havana takes place in the late fifties, during the Cold War. It tells the story of Wormold, an English, divorced vacuum cleaner salesman in Cuba. Read more
Published on April 4 2002 by Stephanie Noverraz

4.0 out of 5 stars His Best and Most Humorous Entertainment
More successful than most of Greene's "entertainments," this comic spy tale set in pre-Castro Cuba concerns an insignificant little man-a vacuum cleaner salesman to be... Read more
Published on Nov 13 2001 by A. Ross

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