eMusic

Start Your Trial
Our Man in Havana

Our Man in Havana

Written by

Graham Greene

Narrated by

Jeremy Northam

Rate it!

Avg: 2.0 (2 ratings)

Audiobook Download Information

Edition:
Unabridged (CSA Word)
Length:
7 hours, 7 minutes
File Size:
195 MB (6 files)
Published:
April 2009

2 credits (what's this?)

Upgrade and Get This Audiobook Today!Requires Download Manager

Summary

Special release to commemorate 50 years since Castro's Cuban revolution. In a legendary novel that appears to predict the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962, Graham Greene introduces James Wormold, a vacuum cleaner salesman whose life in transformed when he is asked to join the British Secret Service. He agrees, and finds himself with no information to offer, so begins to invent sources and agencies which do not exist, but which appear very real to his superiors. Then follow some very real events, such as undercover work and even murder attempts, all backed up by phantom chains of information and invented covert agencies. An often light-hearted but massively important complete and unabridged audiobook, which makes many comments on present-day life despite being published over 50 years ago. The book was also made into a hit film starring Carol Reed and Alec Guinness in 1959.

Quotes from the Critics

"Say what you will, this is a distinguished narrative idea, worthy of its distinguished author. Had he taken a walk around the block, decided to believe his own tale, and told it with simple conviction, it might have been hair-raising, all the more so from his personal knowledge of its background. Instead, he has used tricks, and achieved mostly unreality. His characters lack bone, flesh and blood, and only occasionally seem lifelike. They are dumb when convenience requires, rarely showing initiative on their own. The mystery doesn't mystify but mainly begets confusion, and the same can be said for the daughter's Catholicism....All in all, as little as a Greene fan likes to say it, this book misses, and in a thoroughly heartbreaking way, for it misses needlessly where it might have rung the bell." - New York Times Book Review

"We remember that Mr. Greene has won competition prizes for parodies of himself; Entertainment or not, we may have some difficulty in keeping up our spirits when his drollery so closely resembles his despair....If you value the true novelist's power of unexpected invention, and enjoy watching a master at work on a plot--deftly building into a perfectly sound structure an element of pure absurdity--you will want to read 'Our Man in Havana'." - Spectator

"Graham Greene's most recent book is another of those superior thrillers of his, which are among the best reading matter on the middle ground between escapist entertainment and the serious novel." - Atlantic Monthly

"'Our Man in Havana' is wholly delightful; in its deftness of invention and superb timing it beguiles like a Clair film. If we need any reminder here it is; when it comes to telling a story, however light, the implications of which go beyond the surface narrative, there is still no one to touch Greene." - New Statesman

"A cold, thin, generally fascinating story....The end, which takes place in London, is in keeping with the plot, which is ironic, fantastic, and, in Mr. Greene's talented and contemptuous hands, plausible." - New Yorker

"The chill of lurking dread is no longer so chilly, the pace no longer so breathless as in Greene's earlier thrillers. He cannot resist slipping in a cruel, pointless caricature of a dumb U.S. businessman, or an unlikely scene in a top-secret conference, at which Wormold's secretary sprays the green baize with Greene bitterness. Such interludes damage the 'entertainment,' but they cannot really spoil the unique formula of suspense plus sin." - Time

"The essential complaint against the book is that Mr. Greene is wanting in sense of form, but such criticism becomes feeble when confronted by the cardinal fact that the author has set out to do something extremely difficult and has abundantly succeeded in doing it. He offers an entertainment and from the beginning to the end of this book he entertains." - Times Literary Supplement

Loading...

processing

close

Recently Viewed

© 1998-2009 eMusic.com Inc. eMusic and the eMusic logo are either registered trademarks or trademarks in the USA or other countries. All rights reserved.

Muze © 2009 Muze Inc. For personal non-commercial use only. All rights reserved.
Portions of this content may be property of Baker & Taylor, Inc. or its licensors and shall be subject to copyright and all other protections under the law.