Len Deighton (Left) and Mike Ripley |
MIKE RIPLEY used to be an award-winning crime writer. From 1989-2008 he was the crime fiction
critic for the Sunday Telegraph, the Daily Telegraph and the Birmingham Post, reviewing over 950
crime novels. He has also written on
crime fiction for The Observer, The Times and The Guardian and has taught a course in Creative Crime Writing at
Cambridge. He currently writes the
monthly ‘Getting Away With Murder’
column for Shots Magazine and is the editor for both the Ostara Crime and Top Notch Thrillers imprints.
With the publication of The Ipcress File fifty years ago in
1962, Len Deighton broke the mould of British spy fiction at a time when the
mould needed breaking, introducing us to down-to-earth professional spies who
were light years away from the high-living, licensed-to-kill ‘special agents’ then
on the scene. He quickly established
himself as a major force in the genre and then went on to show himself to be an
accomplished military historian as well.
In SS-GB, he showed his skill
as a thriller writer and his attention to military detail and, just to make
life more interesting, added an outrageous twist on history itself. For any serious student of crime/thriller
writing, this one is a must.
“Himmler’s got the King locked up in the
Tower of London”.
If the title and the
iconic Raymond Hawkey dust jacket with its twopenny-halfpenny British stamp
featuring Hitler’s head and its 14 November 1941 postmark have not already
indicated that this is no ordinary thriller, then that first sentence should
seal the deal.
In fact, Len Deighton’s SS-GB is a remarkable thriller, starting as a whodunit, morphing into a spy
story and then a conspiracy thriller with global implications, but ultimately it
is a novel about a decent man trying to do good job of upholding the law even
as his world crumbles around him. And
what a world! The Battle of Britain is
lost, the Nazis have invaded and control most of the country, Churchill is dead
(executed in Berlin by firing squad), King George VI is a prisoner in the Tower
and Hitler has taken the salute at a Victory parade down Whitehall on his 52nd
birthday on 20th April 1941 – there’s even a photograph on the back
of the dust jacket to prove this. But
even in defeat and under occupation, life in London carries on and so, of
course, does death.
The murder of a
scientist in his seedy rooms in Shepherd’s Market seems like a case for
Scotland Yard’s finest detective Douglas Archer, whose pre-war record of
solving high-profile crimes has already earned him the tag of ‘Archer of the
Yard’. His now German superiors seem
keen for Archer to work the murder case – suspiciously keen, given that a clear
power-struggle is taking place between the SS and the regular German army, the
Wehrmacht, for control of occupied Britain.
The situation is further complicated (well, this is by Len Deighton
after all) with the arrival in London of Dr Oskar Huth of the SD (the Nazi
intelligence service) who has his own agenda at the top of which is replacing
the jovial SS General Kellerman, Archer’s boss at the Yard. When Archer discovers that the murdered
scientist was working on atomic research in a secret facility in Devon, the
stakes are immediately raised and the plot turns positively Byzantine as
Americans, the German army’s intelligence service the Abwehr and the British
Resistance (a motley mix of aristocrats, Old School Whitehall mandarins, shady
black-marketers and frustrated, patriotic Londoners) become involved in a
conspiracy the ultimate aim of which is to deny the Nazis the atomic bomb and
to bring (neutral) America into the war. Tied up in the plot is the fate not
only of honest cop Archer, who finds himself smack in the middle of the deadly
rivalry between the SS and the Wehrmacht (and between the SS and the SD), but
also of the imprisoned King George.
At the dark heart of SS-GB, Len Deighton does what Len
Deighton does best. His spy stories have
always been boardroom dramas of squabbling intelligence agencies – office
politics at their most lethal – rather than of the car-chase-shoot-’em-up
school. That is not to say the book
lacks tension or action, for there are vivid and memorable scenes where Archer
is attacked by a knife-wielding assassin on the escalator at Piccadilly Circus
tube station, where the Highgate Cemetery grave of Karl Marx is blow up during
a celebration of the Nazi-Soviet Pact, where the King is rescued from the Tower
and smuggled across fog-bound London in a wheelchair, and in the tragic
commando raid on the atomic research plant.
There is also a really chilling casual reference to a concentration camp
for Jewish prisoners having been built ‘on Wenlock Edge’, a brilliantly sour
choice for the cynical Nazis, given its pastoral English connotations in the poetry of A.E. Houseman and the music
of Vaughn Williams.
It should not be
forgotten that Deighton is a Londoner, knows it like the back of his hand and
has always had an eagle eye for its topography even when he imagines it under
German occupation:
And yet even a born and bred Londoner, such as
Douglas Archer, could walk down Curzon Street and, with eyes half-closed, see
little or no change from the previous year.
The Soldatenkino sign outside the Curzon cinema was small and discreet,
and only if you tried to enter the Mirabelle restaurant did a top-hatted
doorman whisper that it was now used exclusively by Staff Officers from Air
Fleet 8 Headquarters, across the road in the old Ministry of Education offices. And if your eyes remained half-closed, you
missed the signs that said ‘Jewish Undertaking’ and effectively kept all but
the boldest customers out. And in
September of that year 1941, Douglas Archer, in common with most of his
compatriots, was keeping his eyes half-closed.
There, in a few
sentences, Deighton shows how nothing much seems to have changed yet everything
has; but even in defeat the ‘spirit of the Blitz’ is still evident. During a frightening German army raid on a
school, as innocent teachers and older pupils are loaded on to trucks to be
taken away for questioning, they begin to sing “If you’re happy and you know
it, clap your hands” to keep their spirits up.
And when a subsequent mass arrest and round-up lasting three days
follows the Highgate Cemetery explosion, Londoners label it “the night of the
buses”.
Deighton’s research into matters military
is, of course, spot-on and his imagination is in top gear when it comes to the
minutiae of civilian life in a defeated country under occupation: the dusty tea
leaves, the watered-down beer, the black market operated on the Vauxhall Bridge
Road, the rationing of coal and wood for heating fuel, the small cubes of
margarine which are labelled as ‘a token of friendship from German workers’,
the former proprietor of Samuels’ West End restaurant reduced to selling fried
turnip pieces from a roadside stall while wearing a yellow star.
There is so much
military and social history in SS-GB that it seems unfair to label it a
novel of “What If?” because the reader is convinced that it really did happen
here.
But never forget this is
a thriller and some of the iciest thrills can creep up and blindside the unwary. There is one particular scene, without
dialogue, where ‘Archer of the Yard’ finds himself on a stationary train in the
fog-bound marshalling yards at Nine Elms and realises that the man in the next
compartment is Heinrich Himmler.
If the hairs on the back
of your neck do not stand up then, they never will.
Great review. I just reread SS-GB after many years and it was as good as I remembered it.
ReplyDeleteWhat an absolute genius Deighton is.
ReplyDeleteI love his work and SS:GB is definitely one of his best and that makes it one of the best thrillers of the last sixty years. I feel lucky that he has been operating during my lifetime.