A Murder of Quality
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A Murder of Quality | |
Author | John le Carré |
---|---|
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Series | George Smiley |
Genre(s) | Mystery novel |
Publisher | Gollancz |
Publication date | 1962 |
Media type | Print (Hardback & Paperback) |
ISBN | NA |
Preceded by | Call for the Dead |
Followed by | The Spy Who Came in From the Cold |
A Murder of Quality is the second novel by John le Carré. It follows George Smiley, the most famous of le Carré's recurring characters.
Contents |
[edit] Plot summary
George Smiley is called by a wartime co-worker, Miss Brimley, who now publishes a small Christian magazine, to investigate a "death menace" letter sent by a reader who claims her husband, a boarding school instructor, is trying to kill her. The brother of Fielding, a classics professor who was one of Smiley's close wartime associates in the Circus, is also an instructor at the school where the woman's husband teaches, the famous Carne College. Unfortunately, the woman is killed before Smiley can even talk to her, and Smiley goes to the school to investigate, in an effort to ease Miss Brimley's concern that her failure to call the police was a cause of the woman's death.
Carne was the youthful home of Smiley's estranged wife Ann, and Smiley is both the subject of snide gossip and witness to a rural "town/gown" gap (with mistrust on both sides) that makes finding the killer seem more and more unlikely. At every step, he realizes that were many possible reasons for the murder, and the number of suspects only seems to get bigger. The town police focus on a madwoman as the murderer, but both Smiley and the investigating officer believe her to be innocent ... and then Smiley discovers the hiding place of the murderer's blood-stained clothes, while the police find a second murder victim, a boy in Fielding's house. The clues, and a confession about the secret, delusional vindictiveness of the murdered woman from her husband (which confirms the odd reaction to her that Smiley had noted from the local minister), lead Smiley to the real murderer: Fielding's brother, who was being blackmailed by the woman due to a WWII homosexuality conviction, and who had only kept his job at substantially-reduced wages. The boy had inadvertently seen evidence that disproved Fielding's brother's alibi for the time of the woman's murder, although the boy was never aware of it before his death.
Le Carré has denied that Carne was based on any particular school: "There are probably a dozen great schools of whom it will be confidently asserted that Carne is their deliberate image. But he who looks among their common rooms for the D'Arcys, Fieldings and Hechts will search in vain." [1]
[edit] Television adaptation
The novel was adapted for television by Thames Television in 1991. It starred Denholm Elliott as Smiley. Other featured actors included Glenda Jackson, Billie Whitelaw, Joss Ackland, Moray Watson, David Threlfall and Christian Bale.
[edit] References
- ^ Preface to A Murder of Quality, p. 274 in Octopus/Heinemann omnibus edition, 1979.