Maybe they should have sprung for a ski vacation? It was supposed to be the trip of a lifetime, but Perry Makepiece and Gail Perkins get more than they bargained for from their trip to Antigua in John le Carr茅's terrific thriller Our Kind of Traitor. Perry plays one game of tennis with a Russian named Dima, and the couple are suddenly being interrogated by British Secret Service in a Bloomsbury basement. The taut opening section, in which what happened on vacation to the 鈥渋nnocents abroad鈥 unspools during the all-night questioning, brilliantly showcases how bright, beautiful, and truly unprepared Gail and Perry are for the world into which they've blundered.
鈥淥ur Kind of Traitor鈥 is full of le Carr茅's trademark wry intelligence. When Perry asks why he should take the Secret Service's word that everything is going to be all right, he asks, 鈥淥n the strength of what? Aren't you supposed to be the gentlemen who lie for the good of their country?鈥
鈥淭hat's diplomats. We're not gentlemen.鈥
鈥淪o you lie to save your hides?鈥 Perry challenges.
鈥淭hat's politicians. Different game entirely.鈥
After 50 years, literature's spymaster deserves his own genre, but 鈥淥ur Kind of Traitor鈥 is an especially accessible entry for le Carr茅 newcomers, since his main characters also have no idea what's going on.