Talia
in Waterstones Cambridge asked me an interesting question when I thrust a proof
of my new book The Exile into her hands last week.
"Is
it spies or crime?"
A
bit of both, I replied. We need stories that can span both genres now. Because
that's the world we live in, isn't it?
Look
at Russia's invasion of Ukraine. I certainly did, when I was writing The Exile.
It's the closest thing to a third world war that I've lived through.
If
the Russian President was a fictional character, how would you write him? Sure,
he's an ex-KGB officer. But we're a long way from the intellectual fencing
match of the Cold War.
Vladimir
Putin likes "active measures", and he's not subtle about it. Recent aktivnye
meropriyatiya include countless hacking operations, a bomb at an
ammunition depot in the Czech Republic and a poison plot which left a civilian
dead in Salisbury.
He's
also as keen on amassing personal wealth as he is on plotting intelligence
exploits. So is Putin a politician, a spy chief or simply a thief and
murderer? Is it spies or crime?
What
about Yevgeny Prigozhin, the man who almost unseated the boss? Oligarch?
Military leader? Aspiring statesman? Perhaps - but Prigozhin was also a
convicted gangster who swelled the ranks of his private army with recruits from
the same kind of penal colonies he knew from the inside.
When
the new Cold Warriors are ex-cons and their leaders are warlords who order
bloody hits on their rivals, we've come a long way from cerebral MI6 men
sniffing out Cambridge-educated moles. Intelligence work "rests on a kind
of gentleness", said George Smiley. Not anymore.
The
brazen, lawless quality of the Putin age was very much on my mind when I wrote
The Exile. I mostly do historical novels, and my new book is largely set in
France during the early 1950s - the closest analogue I could find to modern
Russia.
The
France of the Fourth Republic was a fading empire too, unsure of its place in a
new world order and desperately trying to hang on to its rebellious colonies.
Post-war France was hurting - and lashing out. Political violence is nothing new
on the other side of the Channel, but the really astonishing thing was the
level of collusion between various agencies of the state and organised crime,
particularly the Corsican underworld.
I
hadn't set out to write a crime thriller, but I couldn't do justice to the
period without trying to get into the minds of the spivs, seductresses,
con-artists, gunrunners and godfathers who got caught up in the secret war.
Espionage
fiction is tough enough, with its geopolitics and tradecraft, its complex
characters leading double lives. Crime writing has its own special demands too.
To my mind, it's all about the dialogue. Is it authentic? Does it smell of the
streets?
Why
attempt to combine the two genres, if it's so hard to pull off? Because that's
the world we have to deal with. The boundaries between state actors and
criminal organisations are disappearing. High diplomacy and low lives are
intertwined.
Writing
fiction that reflects this reality is a worthy aim, I think, even if the books
that emerge from the process end up being harder to categorize.
It's
certainly an idea that will keep me occupied for my next few novels. I hope you
find them somewhere in good bookshops, although I'm not sure about the section.
The Exile by Patrick Worrall is published by Bantam Press on 11th July at £16.99
Patrick
Worrall can be found on “X” @paddyworrall
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