I always enjoyed leCarre's espionage books. The plot and suspense was carefully cultivated, the characters were believable for their strengths and flaws, the endings usually understated in terms of reality, but the major principals usually bearing a heavy price. Unfortunately with the end of the Cold War, le Carre seemed to suffer, leading to dabblings in other areas- usually with poor returns. (The strong exception of course is "The Constant Gardener")
So I held high hopes for this spy thriller set against the background years of glastnost and perestroika. The smooth anti-hero is Barley Blair, a British publisher who gets caught up with a manuscript detailing flaws in the Soviet military industry, MI5 and CIA; and a strikingly attractive Soviet female publisher with an idealistic streak.
I wanted to like my first audiobook from this author. The scenes are all the more immersive for the reading, with Barley and Katya being played very well. There is a terseness to most of the set scenes, very impressive because it is only dialogue and scene-setting sound effects. I found Barley's MI5 interrogation and induction as well as his spycraft efforts in the field in the Soviet Union gripping to the point of claustrophobia.
Yet there is a bit of flakiness to nearly all the characters. Barley Blair, a man who almost has no ethics, develops them by the start of CD2. He has multiple female conquests and comes across as a middle aged Rover, suddenly falls completely for Katya who he has never met but only has heard being decribed as striking.
And not to give the ending away, but the subsequent arrangement that Barley effects with the "Sovs" is completely unbelievable in the context of the story presented by the audiobook (Soviet authorities allow Barley to dictate terms)
I am not certain if this is the fault of the original text or the adaptation. I was willingly swept away by the excellent performances until the lightweight ending.
However, I would recommend this set for the strong efforts of the cast and the perfect capture of the relevant mood in all its scenes.