Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Creator / LenDeighton

Go To

1[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/31234.jpg]]
2
3Leonard Cyril Deighton (born 18 February 1929) is considered one of the Three Great British Spy Writers, along with Creator/IanFleming and Creator/JohnLeCarre. His work lies roughly between the two on the SpyFiction scale, though closer to the "stale beer" end - grounded in the complications of politics, intrigue and loyalty like le Carré, but with a touch of Fleming-esque zip to the pacing, some exotic globetrotting, and (in the Unnamed Spy) a snarky main character who's good with women and can get by in a fight.
4
5His most famous series, beginning with ''The Ipcress File'', features an [[NoNameGiven unnamed]] spy (who was named Film/HarryPalmer when three of the novels were adapted into films starring Creator/MichaelCaine).
6
7His seminal work is considered to be ''Bomber'', a meticulously researched and detailed account of a fictional British air raid during UsefulNotes/WorldWarII and the devastation it causes.
8
9Another well known series of his is the Literature/BernardSamsonSeries, best described as a Trilogy of Trilogies with an epic thrown in for good measure. It's set around Berlin near the end of the Cold War. Famously, this series popularized the story of JFK accidentally saying he was a jelly doughnut, although since the protagonist is an UnreliableNarrator, it should be taken with more than a grain of salt.
10
11In his ''SS-GB'' AlternateHistory book, Hitler has invaded England and defeated the British. The book also features Mayhew, one of the most subtle and formidable {{Chessmaster}}s in literature of any kind.
12
13Deighton's also written some non-fiction works, most notably ''Fighter'' and ''Blitzkrieg'', the first two instalments in an OrphanedSeries on WWII battles. He was also a cookery writer for ''The Observer'' in the 1960s and published several cook books, most notably ''Len Deighton's Action Cook Book'' which — unusually for that genre — was specifically aimed at men.
14
15As of 2023 he is still alive, but has not written a full-length novel since 1996.
16
17----
18!!Works by Len Deighton with their own trope pages include:
19* Literature/BernardSamsonSeries
20* Series/{{SSGB}}
21* Film/HarryPalmer
22
23!!Other works by Len Deighton provide examples of:
24* AlternateHistory: ''SS-GB''
25* {{Chessmaster}}: Mayhew in ''SS-GB''
26* ConvenientlyUnverifiableCoverStory: In ''SS-GB'' the hero finds a fake ID on a member of LaResistance, listing as his birthplace a town that had its records office destroyed in the war. The hero notes that lots of fake [=IDs=] use that town.
27* CreatorThumbprint: Many of his protagonists, particularly the unnamed narrator of ''The Ipcress File'' and its sequels, are foodies and tend to lovingly describe their meals. Deighton himself got a start in writing by penning a food column for the ''Observer''. As of 2014, he's taken this up again.
28* DeadpanSnarker: The Unnamed Spy especially, and (to a lesser extent) Bernard Sampson. Reading Deighton's history non-fiction shows it's something they get from the writer himself.
29* NoNameGiven: The narrator-protagonist of ''The Ipcress File'' and sequels never gives a name, pointing out that as a secret agent he changes names frequently and none of them are his real name anyway.
30* OrphanedSeries: Unusually for this trope, a non-fiction example. ''Fighter'' and ''Blitzkrieg'' were two books in a planned twelve-volume set of WWII's most famous battles. Sadly this project was dropped.
31* RealMenCook: When you see Harry Palmer skilfully break a couple of eggs in the film version of ''The Ipcress File'', the hands in the close-up belong to Len himself, who was an accomplished cook. He also wrote a comic strip about cooking for ''The Observer'' (some of which can actually be seen on the kitchen wall in the scene in question) and several cookbooks, notably ''Len Deighton's Action Cook Book'' which was published in 1965, which has resulted in him being credited with getting a lot of men interested in cooking.

Top