Any good book/literature on espionage?
I'm interested
bump
>>10010072
"The Company" by Littel.
Tinker, tailor, soldier, spy.
>>10010072
Harlots Ghost
Operation Shylock
The Tailor of Panama
watch princess principal tee bee H
>>10010153
Kys
>>10010072
If you're not looking for strict accuracy, the early James Bond novels are a fun read.
John Le Carre's works if you are looking for more serious stuff.
Some of Tom Clancys books have elements of espionage in them.
>>10010072
Everything in between Maugham's Ashenden and Charles McCarry's Paul Christopher novels is pulp filler. If you must Littel, then Legends, because its about losing one's mind as one loses one's identity. Company is a self-indulgent door stopper about the stock market crash of 1987. LeCarre is the Charles Dickens of spylit, so if you like your glacially paced stalk and talk peppered with preachy Bong peeves, then have at it-- the bible of non fiction in the genre is A Short Course In The Secret War by Christopher Felix. Note the entendre - a war which is secret which is also a war fought with secrets.
>>10010196
youtube teen out
>flies as messengers
fucking french Pynchon
>>10010072
The Quest for Karla trilogy.
The Cuckoo's Egg
Ace of Spies (by Robin Lockhart)
Red Orchestra. The Story of the Berlin Underground and the Circle of Friends Who Resisted Hitler
The Great Game
The Aubrey Maturin series.
The Innocent
>>10010236
In the same vein, Richard Marcinko's early Rogue Warrior novels. They get pretty stupid about five or six books in, but its very much spycraft blended with gunfights.
Illuminatus!