I purchased this book with the intention of finding out about the enigmatic counter-intelligence chief of the CIA nicknamed Mother, who in most accounts is a fictional representation of the real CIA Chief of Counter-Intelligence James Jesus Angleton. Rather than just picking it up out of a dealer's bin. As fiction it makes for a good, and different sort of spy-yarn. It's not so much in the vein of James Bond's familiar exploits with the dapper spy and the hoardes of women, fancy gadgets and souped-up cars. The main character is certainly older, and fixed in his ways, calling to mind a John LeCarre type of anti-spy, or anti-James Bond handsome rich type of spy. "Orchids For Mother" deals mostly with the behind the scenes operations and betrayals and inter-office mechaniations and ambitions than a more kiss kiss bang bang type of story. There is globe-trotting operations, tense war strife moments, and definitely enough sexual escapades to keep a James Bond type enthusiast entertained. But this is more a novel along the lines of the William F. Buckley type, more intelligence than brawns.
I found as fiction this tale engrossing although the author's leaning of a seeming peevishness with his main character I felt throughout the book. If possible this Mother felt more like an anti-Angleton type of character, succumbing to the more petty aspects of a paranoid nature and vindictive against those who had ousted him. I didn't see the end coming, and felt emotion for the main character, given his life over to the Company, and death too.
I found it also bemusedly cynical, in the absurdities of the spy life and the personalities who make up these clandestine agencies, along the lines of Robert Littell's "The Company". A rich novel and now TNT mini-series (available on DVD)"The Company" is a wonderful fictonal gathering of the bunch who made up and started the CIA, operated during the Cold War and filled with action-packed excitement along with intelligent suspense. Although in Littell's tale I was left with a more pro-Angleton view than in "Orchids For Mother". If I had to sum up "Orchids For Mother" I would say it is more like Littell's in writing style and theme, though Mother is certainly a whole different character. Between the two characterizations it holds for a most schizophrenic view of a fascinating character in U.S. spy history.
A book worth at least a little more than the 10 cents on the tag of the cover featured here on Amazon...A great beach read for those interested in different spy novels, and a little bit of 1970's nostalgia.