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Funeral in Berlin

Book cover
Author Len Deighton
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Genre(s) Spy novel
Publication date 1964
Media type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
ISBN NA
Preceded by Horse Under Water
Followed by Billion-Dollar Brain

Funeral in Berlin is a spy novel by Len Deighton. Leonard Cyril Deighton (born February 18, 1929, Marylebone, London) is a British Historian, Cookery expert The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom, the UK or Britain,is a Sovereign state located English is a West Germanic language originating in England and is the First language for most people in the United Kingdom, the United States The Genre of spy fiction —sometimes called political thriller or spy thriller or sometimes shortened simply to Spy-fi —arose before A hardcover (or hardback or hardbound) is a Book bound with rigid protective covers (typically of cardboard covered with Cloth Paperback, softback, or softcover describe and refer to a Book by the nature of its binding. Horse Under Water (1963 ISBN 0-399-10419-4 is the second of Len Deighton 's Spy novels featuring an anonymous British agent protagonist (named Billion-Dollar Brain (1966 ISBN 0-09-985710-3 is a Cold War Spy novel by Len Deighton, and the fourth protagonised by an anonymous secret agent The Genre of spy fiction —sometimes called political thriller or spy thriller or sometimes shortened simply to Spy-fi —arose before Leonard Cyril Deighton (born February 18, 1929, Marylebone, London) is a British Historian, Cookery expert

The subject of the novel — arranging a Soviet scientist's defection — is dated, but the characters (especially Johnny Vulkan and Colonel Stok) remain memorable. Another controversial character is the civil servant Hallam, who is shown to be susceptible to blackmail because he is homosexual; male homosexuality remained illegal in England until 1967.

Contents

Plot summary

The unnamed hero travels to Berlin to arrange the defection of Soviet scientist Semitsa brokered by Johnny Vulkan a wheeler-dealer in the Berlin intelligence community. Despite his initial scepticism the deal seems to have the support of Russian security-chief Colonel Stok and Hallam in the British government's Home Office. But why does the fake documentation for Semitsa need to be so precisely specified? And what is the interest of Israeli intelligence agent Samantha Steel in the case?

The complex plot unfolds to reveal a story of betrayal, murder and concentration camp secrets long-forgotten.

Legal dispute with Brock's Fireworks

The U. K. publication of Funeral in Berlin provoked a censorship lawsuit; at the climax, the protagonist and Hallam meet at a fireworks party where they discuss the hazards of fireworks. U. K. fireworks makers objected to this discussion text and legally forced censorship of the novel: all Penguin 1966 paperback edition copies had the word-name Brock's (a fireworks company) deleted with black ink; in 1972, Penguin re-printed the novel, but the Brock's paragraphs and dialogue were deleted.

Compare the dialogue from the shortened, censored edition of the novel:


[quote]
'I personally have always been against it,' said Hallam.
'Alcohol?' I said.
'Fireworks night,' said Hallam.
[unquote]

. . . with the original uncensorededition:


[quote]
'Fireworks night,' said Hallam. 'Once a year animals are frightened, children are blinded and burnt. There are terrible accidents, hooligans take advantage of the occasion to throw fireworks into letter boxes and put them in milk bottles. There are cases of them tying them to animals. It's quite a disgusting business. The fire service always suffers casualties, the casualty wards in hospitals are overworked. Who gains?'
'Brock's Fireworks,' I said.
'Yes,' said Hallam, 'and the shops selling them. There is a lot of money changing hands tonight. A lot of us at the Home Office are very much against it, I can tell you, but the interests we are working against are. . . ' Hallam raised flat palms in a gesture of despair.
'They should pay,' said Hallam. 'They should foot the bill for all the damage and accidents and burnt houses that are caused, and if any money is left over after that, it could be paid to the shareholders. '
'But don't they make signal rockets?' I asked,
'Very few, my boy. I've been into the whole business; it is quite degrading that these people make money out of it. Nasty. If the municipal authorities each organised a firework display, that would be another matter. . . '
[unquote]

Adaptation

In 1966 a film version of Funeral in Berlin was made starring Michael Caine. Funeral in Berlin is a 1966 film based on the spy novel by Len Deighton. Sir Maurice Joseph Micklewhite Jr, CBE (born 14 March 1933 better known by his screen name Michael Caine, is an Oscar - and BAFTA

In 1973, the TV series Jason King (starring Peter Wyngarde), used the plot from Funeral in Berlin to smuggle an individual out of East Germany. Jason King can refer to Jason King (journalist, cultural critic and musician ''Jason King'' (TV series, British television programme Peter Paul Wyngarde (born August 23 1933) is an Anglo-French actor best known for playing the character Jason King in two television series in the late The book itself is shown at the end of the episode. (Ostensibly, they had been using a plot from a book written by eponymous hero Jason King, but it turns out at the end that that was a double bluff. King ostentatiously throws the Deighton book into the fireplace. )

References to chess

Every chapter title is referenced to a quote from the rules of chess. The Soviet colonel Stok boasts that he is one of the best chessplayers in Berlin at that time. He asks the hero "Do you like chess?" He replies "Yes, but I prefer games where there is a better chance to cheat. "




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