
Ashenden
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Narrated by:
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Christopher Oxford
About this listen
When war broke out in 1914, Somerset Maugham was dispatched by the British Secret Service to Switzerland under the guise of completing a play. Multilingual, knowledgeable about many European countries, and a celebrated writer, Maugham had the perfect cover, and the assignment appealed to his love of romance, and of the ridiculous.
The stories collected in Ashenden are rooted in Maugham's own experiences as an agent, reflecting the ruthlessness and brutality of espionage, its intrigue and treachery, as well as its absurdity.
©1955 W. Somerset Maugham (P)2012 Audible, Ltd.In the introduction Maugham describes how true stories come across; incomplete, unsatisfying and with a tendency to fade and this is exactly how these tales come over. It is as if he is telling us they are true tales from his own past and they most probably are. The world has moved on, people are different but Maugham's writing is still worth a read.
My name is certainly not James Bond
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A great book, not one of my favourites though.
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Great stories of the first world war
Great writer of the very late eighteenth and nineteenth century
A story of a Spy
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old school spy novel but a lacking story line
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The narration by Christopher Oxford is a marvel. It is the first time I have heard him (I listen to many books and readings). His tone is perfect and comfortable, and the voices he uses for the characters and their emotions are so good that you I became entranced by the book and the way he read it. I am sure when I next read Maugham it will be with his voice in my head. Even his accent for The Hairless Mexican (one of the characters) while nowhere near the real thing was nevertheless so consistent and well-rounded in its own right that I soon forgot it wasn’t an accurate accent. He is also very good at reading the dialogue of female characters too.
I hope you enjoy it as much as I did.
Wonderful writing, excellent oration
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An unglamorous spy, with wit
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Dryly witty, with a splinter of ice at its heart
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The first spy story I am told
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Would you listen to Ashenden again? Why?
Yes. The stories were left open and intriguingly ambiguous.What other book might you compare Ashenden to, and why?
John Le Carre's "Secret Pilgrim" has a similar structure of linked stories about the underside of espionage, in Le Carre's case during the the Cold War, and in Somerset Maugham's case, during World War 1. The geography of the two novels and their views of Europe at a time of crisis also bears comparison.Which scene did you most enjoy?
The downbeat capture of a German spy at a lakeside port in France.Was there a moment in the book that particularly moved you?
The above scene because the implication is that no one really wins in the spying game.Any additional comments?
Somerset Maugham uses a technique, which is common in formula-fiction, in which character can be read off from external features and, especially, the eyes. And yet the stories that make up “Ashenden” are more subtle and open-ended, than one might expect. Possibly, the spy genre, to which Maugham makes such an important contribution in “Ashenden”, assists him in such indirection. There are the epistemological conundrums and double- and even treble-agents; but, more unusual for an age brought up on John Buchan, Dornford Yates and Sapper, these spy stories are downbeat and morally ambiguous. Stories end, sometimes as a chapter might end – up in the air or apparently in the middle of something. These moments are memorable and the form of loosely-linked stories contributes to the uncomfortable feeling of uncertainty that runs through the book, outweighing the surface characterisations, some racist or at least crass. Somerset Maugham is far less middlebrow than he liked to make himself out to be. And, in his use of Ashenden as a spy whose cover is that of a playwright collecting material for his plays, he remains as good as any writer in bringing geography into fiction, here Europe during the years of the First World War. Hotels, trains, steamers, frontiers, and towns and cities in supposedly neutral countries, notably Switzerland, which are full of spies and secret police. As in John Le Carre’s espionage novels, the routine of intelligence gathering and channelling it to the spy-masters is suddenly pierced by violence.“My name is Somerville,” said Ashenden.
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Would you recommend this audiobook to a friend? If so, why?
I would recommend this book to anyone who enjoys espionage, thrillers or history. It's both one story and a collection of short stories as Ashenden goes about his intelligence work first in Switzerland then in 'X' (Russia). As opposed to the derring do of Ian Fleming's Bond or the intricate plotting of Deighton or Le Carre, Ashenden shows the warts and all monotony, frustration and tedium of spying, which rather than being dull is brought alive by the clinical, matter-of-fact brilliance of the writing, often with biting humour. Somerset Maugham based the character on his own experiences of spying for Britain, and you get the feeling the author went through many of the events he describes in the book. The descriptions of characters are excellent and Ashenden's own feelings towards the shabbiness of the situations in which he finds himself ordered are captured superbly.What was one of the most memorable moments of Ashenden?
Difficult to give say without giving too much away. The way he handles and reads the two detectives he finds in his hotel room in the first chapter is a sound introduction to the book's suspense, humour and Ashenden's cool assessment.Which character – as performed by Christopher Oxford – was your favourite?
Oxford's voice is brilliant for the lead character Ashenden. His depiction of 'R' is good too.Cold narrative. Fascinating insight.
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