Thursday, May 2, 2024

Desmond Cory’s Trieste (AKA Intrigue)

Trieste (originally published as Intrigue) was published in 1954 and is the fourth of Desmond Cory’s Johnny Fedora spy thrillers.

Englishman Shaun Lloyd McCarthy (1928-2001) was quite a prolific author, writing under the name Desmond Cory. If you’re new to the Johnny Fedora books you might make the mistake of thinking that they’re Bond imitations. In fact the first of the Johnny Fedora books pre-dates the first Bond novel.

Trieste begins with the British arresting a Communist agitator named Panagos. They believe that he’s the head of a major subversive organisation which is planning an operation in Trieste, backed by the Soviets. The ultimate objective would be to secure Trieste for the Soviets as a naval base. The problem is that the British have zero evidence against Panagos. Then comes a surprise - the Soviets want to exchange two captured British agents for Panagos. The British are willing to make the exchange, but only if they can first put a spoke in the wheels of Panagos’s Trieste operation.

Johnny Fedora has no official standing. He’s a freelancer but for various reasons British Intelligence think he’s the right man to send to Trieste to find out what Panagos was planning. And Johnny has a personal stake in the case - one of the captured agents the Soviets are willing to exchange is his girlfriend, who also seems to be a freelance spy.

Johnny has a professional British spy, Sebastian Trout, to help him on the case.

There just don’t seem to be any leads to follow up. Johnny and Trout have an uneasy relationship with the local authorities. Johnny has a hunch there’s a woman involved somewhere but a hunch is all he has. The prisoner exchange is coming up on the 30th of the month so there’s a race against time aspect.

Once things start happening they happen quickly and there’s plenty of action. People get shot, Johnny gets arrested and somehow he has to keep a key informant alive. He was right about the woman - there is one, her name is Gisella, and she’s Panagos’s girlfriend, or maybe she isn’t really. There are some further clues but it takes a surprisingly long time for Johnny to spot their real significance. There’s a deadly marksman hunting both Johnny and the girl.

There’s action at sea, which is always fun.

The plot has a few twists, including a major one that makes Johnny realise he’d been groping in the dark.

Johnny Fedora, in this story at least, has an ambiguous official status. That gives him a certain freedom of action. It’s not specifically stated that he has a licence to kill but it’s understood that if he feels the need to do so that’s OK with the British Government. And as we will find out Johnny is very good at killing and it doesn’t bother him. He’s not particularly good at following rules, but that makes him more useful in some ways.

He’s only a part-time secret agent. He has a day job. He’s a piano player, and a pretty good one.

Trieste is a kind of transitional spy thriller. It still has some of the feel of the pre-Bond British spy fiction of the 40s and early 50s, but it also has some of the toughness of the new breed of Cold War spy novels (the later Johnny Fedora books become a bit more Bond-like). The violence is only moderately graphic. There’s no actual sex, but there’s a degree of sexual frankness in regard to Gisella’s relations with men.

Trieste is a good solid Cold War spy thriller. Highly recommended.

I’ve reviewed two of the later Johnny Fedora novels, Hammerhead and Undertow. They’re both pretty good.

4 comments:

  1. "Trieste is a kind of transitional spy thriller" - this is the perfect way to describe this book. I would also recommend this highly. It's probably one of the best in terms of the Fedora / Trout working relationship.

    It's also the closest in plot-type to the later, 1960s Fedora books, such as the ones you've reviewed before - in fact, I think it's the only one of the first ten in the series where he's directly up against the Soviets (in the previous three, the villains are neo-Nazis).

    It's also the last in a sequence of four books - the next one changes completely, and is basically what we would now call a reboot (although that doesn't seem to be what Cory intended.)

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    1. The big mystery is why a top-flight spy writer like Cory gets so little attention. A series of re-issues of his books is badly needed.

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    2. Yeah, it is a bit weird (although they've been published as ebooks, so maybe the industry thinks that's enough). Might be because the first ten books vary much more than, say, the Bond novels; and also because, for all his talent, I sometimes find him infuriating. But if there's one series I would like to see on the bookshelves in the shops, it would be this one. As I've posted before, I'd recommend any of the Fedora novels, but not always for the same reasons!

      He also wrote a couple of short series of detective novels, one in the 50s and a later one in the 90s, about an older academic doing investigations. The first one in the latter series, The Strange Attractor, is quite entertaining, and is available as a paperback

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    3. I'll have to look for a copy of The Strange Attractor.

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