Reading Espionage Fiction: Narrative, Conflict and Commitment from World War I to the Contemporary Era
By (Author) Martin Griffin
Edinburgh University Press
Edinburgh University Press
12th May 2026
United Kingdom
Non Fiction
Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000
Paperback
200
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Reading Espionage Fiction: Narrative, Conflict and Commitment from World War I to the Contemporary Era probes the ways in which the struggles and loyalties of political modernity have been portrayed in the espionage story over the course of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Reading works by authors such as Somerset Maugham, Helen MacInnes, John le Carre, Sam E. Greenlee and Gerald Seymour as popular literature deserving of sustained attention, this book shows how these narratives have both created a modern genre and, at the same time, sought an escape from its limitations. Martin Griffin takes up the importance of plot and character and argues that, in this branch of fiction, the personal has always and ever been political.