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Word: deightons (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Despite all its economic attractions, life in Ireland remains lonely and provincial, virtually bereft of the intellectual stimulation that goads most novelists and playwrights. Thus British Novelist Len Deighton (The Ipcress File; Billion Dollar Brain) maintains a residence in Ireland solely for tax purposes but spends most of his time in Portugal...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Living: A Little Bit of Haven | 10/10/1977 | See Source »

...dagger for a trust fund and pocket calculator. Ambler's 15 earlier tales of espionage and intrigue created a shadow world of border crossings and doublecrosses that was both distinctly his own and widely (and successfully) imitated. Such younger writers as John Le Carré and Len Deighton are firmly in the Ambler tradition. The Siege of the Villa Lipp tries a new route. The most imaginative shady deals, it says, are no longer concocted by world-weary agents and conniving government bureaucrats but by jet-hopping financiers. Ambler's latest hero is the guy who came...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Capital Gains | 6/6/1977 | See Source »

This stylish thriller is yet another stop on the Greene-Ambler-Deighton-LeCarre circuit. In his first novel, Dublin-born Joseph Hone follows the impeccable existentialist formula in which the spy is the victim, doomed to suffer betrayals and failures as remote as the stars from his control...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Summer Fiction | 8/14/1972 | See Source »

...classified and sealed up in fireproof safes, out of reach of American spies." The result, for the CIA as well as the KGB, is an astonishing amount of make-work and the accumulation of vast amounts of material that simply cannot be digested?even with computers reminiscent of Len Deighton's The Billion Dollar Brain constantly whirring...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World: Spies: Foot Soldiers in an Endless War | 10/11/1971 | See Source »

...best, pop literature provides a set of tracks along which the reader's fantasies can chug-chug-chug and toot-toot-toot. Len Deighton or Harold Robbins or Erich Segal paints up a few props as passive scenery-model villages with lifelike residents, a plaster panther forever in the act of springing-and the reader's imagination makes it all real. Oliver Lange, for example, posits a brief, one-sided and almost painless Russo-American war-Washington is taken, and that's about it. Afterwards, the Soviets occupy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: And Quiet Flows the Pecos | 3/1/1971 | See Source »

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