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WSWS : Book
Reviews
Le Carré's new novel questions his previous Cold War
certainties
John le Carré's The Constant Gardener,
Hodder and Stoughton, £16.99 ISBN 0-340-7337-3
Book review by Ann Talbot
15 February 2001
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John le Carré's latest novel The Constant Gardener
tells the story of Justin Quayle, a British diplomatand
the constant gardener of the titlewho after the murder of
his wife devotes himself to tracking down her killers. It is a
simple enough theme, but le Carré develops it into a satisfying
novel that deals with a highly topical topicthe giant pharmaceutical
companies use of third world countries for drug testing.
In Kenya, Tessa Quayle is found murdered near Lake Turkana.
Piecing together the last months of his wife's life, Justin discovers
that she was about to expose a drug-testing programme that killed
the Africans it had used as unwitting guinea pigs. The pharmaceutical
company involved is racing to produce a new drug for tuberculosis,
which they anticipate will soon reach epidemic proportions in
the West. They are using Africa as a proving ground, because the
disease is already rife there and the patients are less able to
object. Vast profits hang on the success of their scheme to launch
a new treatment in the lucrative Western market ahead of their
competitors. When Tessa Quayle and an African doctor threaten
to expose the trail of deaths the experiments have left behind,
they are murdered. The trail leads not just to the drug company,
but also to the drug's Kenyan importers and ultimately to Justin
Quayle's employersthe British Foreign Office.
Le Carré is a master of the art of the spy thriller
and this book demonstrates all his narrative skills. Yet his books
have always been more than just straightforward genre novels.
His portrayal of character lifts his writing above the run of
the mill. He has the ability to reveal the moral flaws hidden
behind an apparently respectable façade and to sum up a
character's social origins, status and class outlook with a few
deft pen strokes. Few of his leading characters have measured
up to George Smiley, the spymaster in Tinker, Tailor, Soldier,
Spy. Justin Quayle is sadly no exception. It is entirely possible
to believe that a Foreign Office man could grow perfect freesias,
but it stretches credulity to believe that he would go into battle
against his employerseven if his wife had been raped and
murdered in the African bush. As a result, Justin Quayle never
quite comes to life and remains something of a narrative device,
but the monstrous characters who populate the world through which
he leads us are vintage le Carré, and it is they who persuade
us to suspend our disbelief while we turn the pages.
We are introduced to Sir Bernard Pellegrin of the Foreign Office,
who takes Justin Quayle for lunch at his club where, the
dining room was a risen catafalque with painted cherubs posturing
in a ceiling of blue sky. His smiles are always of the
same duration, the same degree of spontaneous warmth. He
despises the red brick achievers from Croydon who
are increasingly filling up the Foreign Office. He speaks in High
Tory telegramese. The description of him filleting a fish
sums up the history and outlook of an entire class: He put
on his reading spectacles in order to work his way to the lower
half of his sole. When he had done so he held up its spine with
his knife and fork while he peered round like a helpless invalid
for a waiter who would bring him a debris plate.
Through novel after novel, le Carré has pursued his
own psychological flaws and obsessions, making the simple genre
of the spy thriller into a vehicle that is capable of bearing
a much more profound human drama than is common in a form usually
based on action. A recurring theme in le Carré's novels
is that of betrayal. In the Smiley books it is the betrayal of
a Soviet mole, but alongside that, as in The Constant Gardener,
there almost always runs the betrayal of a woman by a man who
fails her emotionally. Judging by a recent television interview,
in which he described the psychological impact of his mother walking
out on the family when he was a child, le Carré is constantly
working through his own feelings of guilt about that experience.
It was once asserted that the door shuts on a writer by the
time he is twelve years old and that all the most profound experiences
that will shape his writing have taken place by then. In le Carré's
case his early experiences prepared him to act as the psychological
lightening conductor for his class. As far as every Englishman
of a certain class is concerned, le Carré has explained
to them why men of their own social standing could betray them
to the Soviets.
Burgess, Philby, Maclean and Blunt, the Cambridge spy ring,
have left a scar in the consciousness of the English ruling class
that still stings. They could not penetrate the mystery of how
boorish communists had turned men who had been to the same schools
as them and were members of the same clubs, into Soviet agents.
Le Carré's novels offer the British ruling class a sense
of absolution by converting the affair of the Cambridge spies
into a moral failure, into a betrayal that could be traced back
to a childish insecurity incurred in the nursery. Le Carré's
virtue is that he can explain this betrayal in terms
of individual, moral failure, because at bottom, he is like the
traitors. In his BBC interview he confessed, or boasted of, a
similarity between himself and Kim Philby. Both, he said, came
from disturbed and questionable backgrounds in which their fathers
had beenshame of shamessometimes unable to pay the
school fees for their sons' private education. Le Carré's
father was a conman who kept one step ahead of the law. His home
life was chaotic. Like Philby, le Carré responded to this
embarrassment by becoming the quintessential high church Anglican
Englishman. They both sought the emotional security, which they
lacked at home, in the bosom of the church and the English establishment.
But the establishment had, like his father, betrayed Philby. His
country had sold out to the Americans and so he turned to the
Russians, who seemed to offer some alternative to the all-pervading
influence of American capitalism, some separate European perspective.
To see events in this light is in some sense comforting, since
it obscures what impelled the Cambridge spies to throw in their
lot with the Kremlin. During the 1930s significant layers of liberal
thinkers in Britain and around the world, including the alienated
sons and daughters of the ruling class, were attracted to the
Soviet Union. Some had vague feelings of sympathy for the achievements
of the October Revolution. Others were horrified by the growth
of fascism and the threat of war, and mistakenly saw the Stalinist
regime as a bulwark against this dangerone which also offered
an alternative to naked class conflict at home through its profession
of support for the people's front against fascism.
Britain in the 1930s had experienced a dramatic reversal in
fortune. Since the treaty of Utrecht in 1713 it had bestridden
the globe like a colossus, but by the 1920s America emerged as
the dominant world power. German industry far outstripped Britain's,
which only survived because of the protected markets offered by
the empire. The class struggles of the time culminated in the
General Strike of 1926. By the 1930s mass unemployment threatened
to further destabilise a social peace that had been made possible
by Britain's world dominance. The attractive power of the Stalinist
Communist Party for the four Cambridge scholars, who became KGB
agents before later being recruited by the British secret services,
was not simply based on a misguided sympathy for socialism. In
this increasingly unstable and volatile world, it must have seemed
to them that the Soviet Union could be a powerful counterweight
to the might of America and other rival imperialist powers; one,
moreover, that had in the Spanish Civil War stressed its democratic
credentials, anti-fascism and opposition to the struggle for social
revolution.
In Tinker Tailor, Soldier Spy and Smiley's People
le Carré offered an explanation of how this betrayal could
happen. His was an answer that lay not in politics or the iron
logic of economics, but in individual psychology, in the human
condition.
Philby's world was one that was well known to le Carré,
who himself had been a professional spy from the age of 17, when
as a student in Bern, just after the Second World War, he ran
little errands for a man at the British embassy. Later
he spied on his fellow students at Oxford and was in Berlin when
the Wall went up in 1961. He retired from MI6 when the success
of his novel, The Spy Who Came in from the Cold, made his
continued role as an agent impossible. He made the Cold War spy
thriller his own, taking it beyond the confines of Fleming's James
Bond model. Marcus Wolf, the head of the East German secret police,
on whom le Carré's character Karla was based, revelled
in the notoriety that le Carré's books conferred upon him
and admired the knowledge of espionage they demonstrated.
With the collapse of the Berlin Wall in 1989 heralding the
end of the Cold War, many speculated whether le Carré would
survive as a novelist. His success has continued because the novels
he wrote were always based on something more than just an expert
handling of a well established genre. They always transcended
their subject and their form. It is doubtful that Marcus Wolf
ever expressed the air of tragic grandeur with which le Carré
invested Karla.
Not only has le Carré found new subject matter in the
post Cold War world, but his attitude to the capitalist system
that he has defended for so long seems to have become more critical.
The publication of The Constant Gardener was preceded by
an article in the Daily Telegraph entitled The Criminals
of Capitalism, in which he condemns the conviction that,
whatever profit-driven corporations do in the short term, they
are ultimately motivated by ethical concerns, and their influence
on the world is therefore beneficial, and so God help us all.
He continues, It seemed to me, as I began to cast round
for a story to illustrate the example, that the pharmaceutical
industry offered the most eloquent example.
The new book he has produced is well researched and based on
documented cases, such as the trials that Pfizer carried out in
Nigeria during an epidemic of bacterial meningitis: Instead of
using standard antibiotics, Pfizer treated sick children and babies
with an antibiotic that was banned for this purpose in the West,
because it was known to cause damage to the joints and could produce
arthritis. The company hoped that tests in Africa would persuade
the US regulators to allow its wider use. Desperate relatives,
who had trekked from country districts, carrying their sick family
members, were not told about the nature of the experiment or about
the risk of side effects. Normally in cases of meningitis, a doctor
would try a whole range of antibiotics, fighting to keep the patient
alive. But Pfizer's doctors continued to administer the antibiotic
under test even when the patients failed to respond to the treatment.
The records show the anonymous deaths of patients who are recorded
only as numbers. Those that survived went back to their villages
with no follow up treatment or examination. No one knows if they
went on to develop arthritis.
Le Carré attempts to take us beyond the anonymity of
the official record and puts a name and face to one patient who
dies in such a test, so that the reader can connect with the suffering.
In itself that makes the book a worthwhile endeavour. But he offers
us more. He puts names and faces to the anonymous government officials
who connive with and protect these activities and, in his vivid
pen portraits of their characters he delineates their inner degeneration
as moral beings.
Where has all this come from? We get a clue in an earlier book
The Night Manager, in which a leading civil servant undergoes
an epiphany as he is cycling through London to his desk in Westminster.
It occurs to him that the Cold War is over; the enemy has decamped
from in front of the gate, but all the crimes that were once justified
by the Cold War are still going on as before. He resolves to change
things. In a civil servant this is scarcely credible but the experience
probably tells us something about le Carré's feelings.
He is genuinely outraged by the depredations of the transnational
companies, but when it comes to offering a solution he is at a
loss. He concludes his Telegraph article suggesting that
what is needed is, a great new movement, an international,
humanitarian movement of decent men and women, that is not doctrinal,
not political, not polemical, but gathers up the best in all of
us: a Seattle demo without the broken glass.
Ultimately the solution to the crimes against humanity that
he has researched and brought to life in his book must be political,
because Western governments of all political complexions back
up the companies that carry them out. These governments are not
inclined to listen to humanitarian appeals; they ruthlessly defend
the interests of the big corporations. Le Carré's political
imagination fails him in his Telegraph article, but his
new book tells a different story. There is no rose tinted ending.
Le Carré knows the inner workings of the state too well
for it to be otherwise. There is a certain logic in fiction that
demands honesty from the author, because he has created a chain
of causality in which one action leads logically to another. If
the author attempts to break that chain, both reader and the writer
are usually aware of it. Impelled by that logic le Carré,
the author, knows that a soft focus ending leaving the reader
with a warm self satisfied glow would not ring true and he does
not offer one.
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