personalmephistopheles: Image of Jamie Campbell Bower as Christopher Marlowe in the TNT show 'Will' (Default)
 [Originally posted to Tumblr on 2 November 2012, then cross-posted to Wordpress on 11 November 2012]

Warning!: This article contains major plot spoilers for Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy and mild spoilers for The Honourable Schoolboy and Smiley’s People. If you wish to remain unspoiled, then I advise that you skip this article.

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John Le Carré’s work is known, perhaps more than anything, for the way in which details are used to tell the story contained within the novel - no detail is wasted, and nearly everything, no matter how obscure, goes towards the end of giving the reader insight into the story, or the characters who reside within it. One such detail is the use of what is known within the Circus as the workname. Within Le Carré’s work, and specifically in this instance, within the Karla Trilogy (Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, The Honourable Schoolboy, and Smiley’s People), the Circus tradition of the workname provides a double function, both in the sense that the workname conveys information about the agent who bears it and in the sense that there is a very deliberate order and reasoning to which worknames the reader learns and when they learn them.

In order to understand Le Carré’s use of worknames as a device within his novels, it is essential that the reader understand the operational function of the workname. While it is easy to conflate an agent’s workname with an alias, what evidence can be pulled from the novels suggests that they are similar but not at all synonymous. Unlike an alias, which may be used in any number of ways (and any given agent may have a large number of them), the workname has a small number of prescribed uses. The first of these, as seen in all three novels, is for the sake of record-keeping. The Circus keeps an extensive database of worknames associated agents both in-action and retired (Smiley’s People 62), and when an agent is mentioned in files, reports, and other such documents, they are commonly referred to by their workname (Tinker, Tailor 78, 90). In addition, an agent will generally - in the field at least, use their workname with other agents, particularly if there is a fear of wire-tapping or other forms of surveillance (The Honourable Schoolboy 518). However, with more casual informants, the agent will generally use an alias rather than their workname, which is more closely guarded.

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Dissension

Friday, 21 December 2018 16:29
personalmephistopheles: Image of Jamie Campbell Bower as Christopher Marlowe in the TNT show 'Will' (Default)
Fandom: Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy / Smiley series
Rating: G
Characters: Percy Alleline, Control, Toby Esterhase, Connie Sachs
Word Count: 259

General Summary: There are certain aspects of the Circus' annual Christmas party's festivities in which Toby Esterhase is hesitant to take part. 

Author’s Note: Back in December 2012, I tackled the 25 Days of Holiday Fic. This was the prompt for 'Santa.'


A bit of Toby Esterhase’s heart sank as he saw the man in red ascending the stairs to the stage, then fell completely into the pit of his stomach as the music swelled, and his mouth set itself in a stern line as he slipped through the crowded space created by the sudden rising of seated bodies, his glass in hand. There was something distinctly unsavoury about the whole affair, Toby had always thought. An air of mockery towards an opponent who often as not was more than a match for them, a making light of something that was strictly business.


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personalmephistopheles: Image of Jamie Campbell Bower as Christopher Marlowe in the TNT show 'Will' (Default)

Fandom: Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy / Smiley Series
Rating: T - M
Setting: Inception au
Characters: Control, Peter Guillam, Bill Haydon, Jim Prideaux, Connie Sachs, Ann Smiley, George Smiley, Jerry Westerby
Primary Pairings: Wasn't sure yet. Probably Bill Haydon/Jim Prideaux, Peter Guillam/George Smiley, Ann Smiley/George Smiley
Secondary Pairings: Probably Peter Guillam/Bill Haydon, Bill Haydon/Ann Smiley

General Summary: Jim Prideaux was meant to be dead, but he isn't, and the process of becoming a true Lotus-Eater is far more difficult than is usually assumed.

There's also a gifset that I made here.

Author’s Note: This was a cool idea that I had planned to write and then never did but I'm putting it here because I still love it. Damn me.


"There is a man." Control paused, his eyes drifting somewhere into the distance over Smiley’s left shoulder. "Jim Prideaux."

Smiley nodded, "I’m aware of him - he was shot and killed in the field."

"That’s where you’re wrong." Smiley’s eyebrows shot up, and Control half-laughed, half-coughed. "Jim Prideaux is still alive, and in England."

"And?" He pursed his lips in an attempt to conceal any further surprise.

Control exhaled a cloud of smoke. "I need you to assemble a team."

"What for?"

"Don’t be dense, George!" Smiley didn’t flinch at the older man’s snarl - he was, at this point, entirely used to his employer’s moods. Finally, Control stubbed his cigarette out in an overloaded ashtray. "For Prideaux, there must never have been a Circus. I need you to make sure of this."

Smiley was quiet for a moment before finally speaking. "You realise that what you’re asking is -"

"You and I both know damn well that it’s possible," Control snapped, "so don’t give me that."

The corners of his mouth twitching downwards briefly, Smiley nodded slowly. "I need at least forty-eight hours to assemble my team."

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