Our Man in Havana (Penguin Classics)
T**D
Cuba on the eve of revolution
What if Cold War hysteria had reached such a pitch that spymasters would accept the most transparent fictions as truth? That’s the conceptual basis underlying this terrific novel, or “entertainment” as Greene called it, which manages to pull off the trick of being at once highly suspenseful and laugh-out-loud funny.A British vacuum-cleaner salesman based in Havana on the eve of revolution takes advantage of the his country’s intelligence service’s hunger for information and makes up an entire spy ring to finance the demands of his precocious teenage daughter. Such is the premise of Our Man in Havana, in which Greene creates a wonderful cast of living characters: the fictionalizing spy himself, James Wormold, his beautiful and manipulative daughter Milly, his doomed German friend Hasselbacher, the evil Captain Segura—modeled on Fulgenico Batista’s actual right hand henchman, Captain Esteban Ventura Novo—and an assortment of comically bungling British spies and spy-masters.Published in October of 1958, the book is astonishingly prescient in its portrayal of Havana on the eve of the Cuban Revolution, which was fated to descend from the Sierra Maestra mountains and expel Batista from power less than three months later, on New Year’s Day of 1959. But the qualities of this novel extend well beyond its status as an amusingly accurate snapshot of history. There are two additional aspects I found particularly striking. The first is how well Greene captures the physical cityscape of Havana, which I can attest, as someone who’s visited the city frequently since 1999, really hasn’t changed very much. Here’s one of many examples of Greene getting the details exactly right:“The long city lay spread along the open Atlantic; waves broke over the Avenida de Maceo and misted the windscreens of cars. The pink, grey, yellow pillars of what had once been the aristocratic quarter were eroded like rocks; an ancient coat of arms, smudged and featureless, was set over the doorway of a shabby hotel, and the shutters of a night-club were varnished in bright crude colors to protect them from the wet and salt of the sea.”Where else but in Cuba can one can read a passage that was written in 1958 but could have been written yesterday? It really enhances one’s appreciation for the time warp that is contemporary Havana. For this reason and others, if you’ve traveled to Cuba or are planning to, this novel is an essential item on your reading list.Another great thing about this novel is the complexity and insightfulness of its thematic underpinnings, particularly the truth that when it comes to international intelligence, made-up things and fairy tales have a way of taking on a life of their own, as in this passage, where Wormold reflects on what the British spymaster, Hawthorne, has in common with his very Catholic daughter, Milly:“He was glad that she could still accept fair stories: a virgin who bore a child, pictures that wept or spoke words of love in the dark. Hawthorne and his kind were equally credulous, but what they swallowed were nightmares, grotesque stories out of science fiction.”Do you think Dick Cheney or Paul Wolfowitz ever read Our Man in Havana? (I suppose it would be too much to ask whether George W. Bush ever did.) Anyway “grotesque stories” are exactly what Wormold feeds his overlords. With the creative gusto of a novelist on a roll, the vacuum cleaner salesman invents a colorful ring of made-up Cuban spies, along with a massive weapons installation in the Sierra Maestra mountains that is actually based on the parts of a vacuum cleaner.The indictment of the entire Cold War ideological zeitgeist couldn't be clearer, and strikes me as a particularly acute insight when it comes to US policy toward Cuba, which was built on exaggeration and outright fictionalization for more than fifty years.The only thing that mars this edition is a stuffy introduction by Christopher Hitchens, in which he makes a few weakly supported and petulant remarks on parts of the book he sees as less effective, and then attempts to put his own hackneyed right-wing spin on Greene’s insightful and prescient portrayals not only of Cuba in the immediate lead-up to Revolution, but of the sublime ridiculousness of Cold War politics.But the novel itself: yes. This entertaining masterwork is essential reading for anyone who wants to understand the fifties, the Cold War, and/or the Cuban Revolution. Highly recommended!If you’re interested in more on Cuba and the growing travel opportunities to the country, check out my website: (...)
C**S
Good book--and read Burgess
This is a very smart and funny book, I like my Greene more humorous than overtly Catholic.If you like this you should really explore Anthony Burgess beyond Clockwork Orange.I would just ask you, should you get this edition, to skip the introduction by Christopher Hitchens, which is sour--I'm assuming whiskey sour. It will ruin the experience. Listening to a drunk go of in a bar is ok--once.
L**Y
Pre-Castro Havana and a madcap MI6
Our Man In Havana is not so much a novel about Cuba, rather it's about MI6 attempting to employ an operative there. Mr. Wormold, a Brit ex-pat selling vacuum cleaners is recruited and the madcap story unfolds.The UK's Secret Service is presented as altogether eccentric, ridiculous and lethal.The hero's immediate superior, is the epitome of the effete Establishment - exclusive tie, stone-colored suit, royal monogram on his silk pajamas and a cold, stiff air.The London Chief, meticulous, romantic and fatally removed from everyday realities by his literary imagination, is more concerned with trumping the Americans and Naval Intelligence than verifying his agents' reports.Greene's ridicule is full of comic asides, from the French speaking secretary sent to a Spanish speaking country - "It's much the same. They're both Latin tongues" - to the lengthy admiration of the ingenious weapons that look just like two-way nozzles and snap action couplings one might find on a vacuum cleaner.The book is more satirical than funny, the plot might be a little slow for some, but the characters are well-drawn and memorable. I have found all of Graham Greene's works to be exceptional and this book is no exception.Order the DVD 'Our Man in Havana' starring the late, great Sir Alec Guinness in a role that seems to be tailor made for him.
K**T
Greene's Best Novel
Still a classic nearly 80 years after publication.Greene's wonderful tale of uncorroborated intelligence.Funny, yet tragic.A short read, but a great read. I'm off now for a daiquiri , or probably two. (Read it, you'll understand the reference)
J**N
Eventually redeemed
I was bored by the first 150 pages or so of set-up, but then Greene surprised me with 50 brilliant pages of pay-off. Like most fiction, it is, I think, overwritten, a cute idea that would have made a good short story spun out to excessive length. Greene seems to have felt compelled to write 200 pages to make each book marketable.
D**E
1950 to 2023
Our Man in Havana is a classic. Before Flemming came Greene...
H**R
READ IT!!
i love this novel. It is so fun and so well-written. It was the perfect summer read, and I recommended it to all my colleagues in th English Dept. at my school. The rest of my summer reading was a bit of a let-down after reading OUR MAN. If you haven' read any Greene, this is a great one. I'd also recommend THE QUIET AMERICAN, which is not a comedy, but it is wonderful.
A**A
Un grande libro
Bella edizione per un romanzo sempre avvincente
K**Y
Great product and service
Ordered and delivered the following day. Just as described.
A**N
c est le chef d 'oeuvre
cela vaut le coup de se donner la peine de le lire en anglais c 'est d’ailleurs un anglais littéraire facile et avec " voyage avec ma tante" les 2 ouvrages que je prefere de Green( tous les deux adaptés au cinema)
M**E
Pleasurable and engaging read
Beautifully observant of human nature. A lighthearted amusing tale, eloquently told.
S**R
Good
Good book, delivered on time and describing very wll that historical period and all the idiosincracies of the fifties. Nice reading.
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