This collection of short stories are based on his experiences as a spy during WWI.
Prospective thrill-seekers are clearly warned off in Maugham’s introduction. He says, "The work of an agent in the Intelligence Department is on the whole extremely monotonous. A lot of it is uncommonly useless. The material it offers for stories is scrappy and pointless; the author has himself to make it coherent, dramatic and probable."
The stories here have verbal dueling and furious thinking but are without car chases, gun play, or stuff blowing up. The fantastic characters would be familiar to readers who like John "Greenmantle" Buchan, such as the Hairless Mexican, femme fatale Giulia Lazzari, and hardcore Teuton Mrs. Caypor. In contrast to the earnest tone of writers like Buchan and Graham "The W Plan" Seton, Maugham writes in his usual amused tone, always tolerant of flawed human nature.
I’ve read a lot of Maugham’s stories and novels and I think, in terms of characterization, dialogue, and Maugham’s favorite themes (like abused love a la Of Human Bondage), these stories rank with his best like Cakes and Ale, The Narrow Corner, and The Razor’s Edge.
Finally, for those into history of genres, with these stories Maugham unwittingly invented the genre of sophisticated espio-fiction, which Eric Ambler and John Le Carre, among many others, later did so well.
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