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A Quiet Life

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A Quiet Life

By: Natasha Walter
Narrated by: Karen Cass
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About this listen

Wife.
Mother.

Spy.

A double life is no life at all.

Since the disappearance of her husband in 1951, Laura Leverett has been living in limbo with her daughter in Geneva. All others see is her conventional, charming exterior; nobody guesses the secret she is carrying.

Her double life began years ago, when she stepped on to the boat which carried her across the Atlantic in 1939. Eager to learn, and eager to love, she found herself suddenly inspired by a young Communist woman she met on the boat. In London she begins to move between two different worlds – from the urbane society of her cousins and their upper class friends, to the anger of those who want to forge a new society. One night at a party she meets a man who seems to her to combine both worlds, but who is hiding a secret bigger than she could ever imagine.

Impelled by desire, she finds herself caught up in his hidden life. Love grows, but so do fear and danger. This is the warm-blooded story of the Cold War. The story of a wife whose part will take her from London in the Blitz, to Washington at the height of McCarthyism, to the possible haven of the English countryside. Gradually she learns what is at stake for herself, her husband, and her daughter; gradually she realises the dark consequences of her youthful idealism.

Sweeping and exhilarating, alive with passion and betrayal, A Quiet Life is the first novel from a brilliant new voice in British fiction.

©2016 Natasha Walter (P)2016 HarperCollins Publishers Limited
Espionage Historical Fiction Literary Fiction Political Marriage Fiction England
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Critic reviews

‘A superb, sophisticated and radical book that refreshes the parts other spy novels cannot reach … Meticulously researched and disarmingly told, A Quiet Life is historical fiction at its best, finding vast uncharted territories within a period we might have thought we knew.’ Chris Cleave, author of THE OTHER HAND and EVERYONE BRAVE IS FORGIVEN

‘A writer of game-changing skill and sensitivity. Few novelists can combine serious feminism with romance and adventure and make it work … a literary page-turner’ THE TIMES

‘Impressive and rewarding’ DAILY MAIL

‘Evokes the period with brilliant precision and detail’ THE SUNDAY TIMES

‘Impressive … easily competing with the claims of such experienced novelists as Sebastian Faulks and William Boyd to the territory’ GUARDIAN

‘A troubling, understated novel, almost hypnotic in the completeness with which it inhabits the mind of its impressionable central character’ SARAH WATERS Best Books of the Summer, GUARDIAN

‘Brilliant’ JULIE MYERSON, Best Books of the Summer, GUARDIAN

‘Elegant, slow-burning… leaving you with no choice but to read on’ METRO

‘A tour de force. Walter has taken us inside a life in hiding, in a novel about love, about political ideals and about the entrapment both create’ Linda Grant

‘A brilliant observer of period, place and upper-class mores’ DAILY MAIL

‘Riveting’ GOOD HOUSEKEEPING

‘The novel really sings’ INDEPENDENT

‘This thrilling tale of sacrifice, love, secrets, and identity is an absorbing debut novel from the feminist author of Living Dolls: The Return of Sexism’ STYLIST

‘As well as having a gift for cool, elegant phrasing, and a fine sensitivity to psychology … Walter proves to be a hardworking and accomplished storyteller’ GUARDIAN

‘This ambitious debut fuses espionage, wartime romance, and enquiry into female identity and power’ MAIL ON SUNDAY

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"The habit of secrecy"

If you could sum up A Quiet Life in three words, what would they be?

The right title.

What other book might you compare A Quiet Life to, and why?

Helen Dunmore, "Exposure" and John Le Carre, "Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy" to see how varied the espionage novel can be.

Have you listened to any of Karen Cass’s other performances? How does this one compare?

No

Was there a moment in the book that particularly moved you?

Laura Last's decision on whether to leave for Moscow or not.

Any additional comments?

“She spoke of a great secret.” This startling statement comes from John Carré’s “Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy” (1974). For all his brilliance, though, Le Carré can rely on the comforts of genre and anti-genre upon which to build an exciting novel that covers perhaps a few years in the lives of George Smiley and others. In her first novel, Natasha Walter’s interest in gender and espionage (see her essay on the women in the circle of the Cambridge spies, The Guardian, 10/5/2003) leads her to confront the more difficult task of showing how Laura Last, who is based on Melinda Maclean, the wife of Donald Maclean, copes with some fourteen years in the role of a wife and, latterly, a mother in what Le Carré calls “the secret world … here, right in the middle of the real world, all round us”. That world’s history and geography were delineated during the years when Maclean, Burgess, Philby, Blunt … made their political commitments, but the routines of tradecraft and shopping, agents and make-up, as well as a thoughtful understanding of deceit and desire, from a woman’s point of view, have been missing from that world.

The intriguing and eventually compelling premise of “A Quiet Life” is how the mundane and then the sudden, high drama of espionage are interleaved over the years following the meeting of an American woman, Laura Leverett, and a member of the British establishment, Edward Last, in London in 1939. They get married and the novel is perceptive on their complicated continuing relationship; they live through the Blitz, then the post-war years in Washington, when Edward is fairly high up in the diplomatic service; and in the early fifties they return to London before Edward has to flee to Moscow with a fellow spy, Nick, to avoid interrogation by the security services. At this final stage, we follow Laura struggling with a Victoria sponge birthday cake for Edward as the news of the death sentence for Ethel and Julius Rosenberg breaks and MI5 close in on Edward. But more than this: she has been in on his espionage for nearly all of these years and has participated significantly in the risks. However, in the later chapters of the novel, Laura Last faces a set of additional dilemmas: how to handle the media exposure that follows Edward’s departure for Moscow, while keeping her own role secret and enduring being portrayed as a dupe; how to evaluate Edward’s feelings towards her when she barely hears from him for two years (after all, he fled with a man and that relationship is played up in the media); and – most troublingly -- how to weigh up what would be the future for her and their daughter if she was to follow Edward, assuming that she could escape while under MI5 and media surveillance.

Even with the pace of a John Le Carré novel in mind – and he is the slowest and most careful of spy-thriller authors -- there was a point when I feared that the “The Quiet Life” would be simply too slow. However, that would be to misunderstood the task that Natasha Walter sets herself, one that is, in its way, gripping and certainly very important. None of the international dimension is sacrificed: Laura has to cut herself off from her communist and fellow-traveller friends in London in order to meet the requirements of the KGB. She has to think through the shock to supporters of Stalin’s regime of the 1939 Nazi-Soviet Pact and then remain quiet on the rehabilitation of the USSR and Uncle Joe later in the War. And then, in Washington, she has to live in an atmosphere of increasing anti-communism, with the trials of Alger Hiss and the Rosenbergs trials, and that of Klaus Fuchs in the UK. The biggest test – and Walter makes as good a job of it as any of the novelists, journalists and academics who have tried – is to explain what led that group of spies, men and women, to do what they did and to keep doing it, particularly when their KGB handlers were such an uninspiring lot who imposed almost unbearable restrictions upon their agents. Idealism? Money? The excitement of a hidden life? As someone who has written on feminism -- and quite controversially in The New Feminism and then in some ways that bear upon her first novel in Living Dolls -- Walter has an argument, threaded through “A Quiet Life”, that women spend more of their lives keeping secrets than men, and that the protocols of espionage, such as "the matching half", are an extension of the subtleties of everyday conversations and relationships – “the habit of secrecy”, she calls it.

Walter tells the story in the third person but, mostly, avoids pushing a message. At times, though, she is too eager to interpret and these moments are often signaled by a jarring expression: “How gauche would that be” or “she could not read him” or “It would be a project”. And her interest in female sexuality doesn’t quite survive the invariable embarrassment of novelistic sex-scenes, especially those related in the third person. Mostly, however, this is a remarkably accomplished novel.

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    3 out of 5 stars
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Extremely slow!

I'm not a violent person but often wished I could slap the main character, who's a complete drip. She's self absorbed to the extent of hardly mentioning the Blitz when living through the war in London and we're supposed to believe she becomes a committed spy for the Soviets after attending a couple of meetings and reading a magazine article.
Her husband is even worse. Don't get me started on him.
This book is much too long and I breathed a sigh of relief when it ended.

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    4 out of 5 stars

Charming and intriguing

I downloaded this a while ago but had forgotten the blurb by the time I started listening so it was wonderfully unexpected! The style of writing and reading are warm and familiar but I’ve never read another book with anything like this plot line. I found the protagonist irksomely pathetic and naive at the outset but persevered and she pulled herself together.

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars

A QUIET LIFE

Started very well but slowed to yawning pace. I enjoyed it but was fairly glad when it ended. Narration was excellent but I felt the book was too long to sustain the story.

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