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My Life in CIA

A Chronicle of 1973

Harry Mathews

$37.95

Paperback

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English
Dalkey Archive Press
28 April 2015
Through a series of improbable coincidences, in the early 1970s Harry Mathews, then living in France, was commonly reputed to be a CIA agent. Even friends had their suspicions, which were only reinforced each time he tried to deny such a connection. With growing frustration at his inability to make anyone believe him, Mathews decided to act the part.

My Life in CIA documents Mathews's experiences as a would-be spy during 1973, where amid charged world events-the coup in Chile, Watergate, the ending of the Vietnam War-he found himself engaged in a game that took sinister twists as various foreign agencies decided he was a presence that should be eliminated.

Harry Mathews has turned these strange events into a spellbinding thriller where the line between fact and fiction gets relentlessly blurred.
By:  
Imprint:   Dalkey Archive Press
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 216mm,  Width: 161mm,  Spine: 16mm
Weight:   290g
ISBN:   9781564783929
ISBN 10:   1564783928
Pages:   203
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Harry Mathews was the only American member of the Oulipo, the Workshop for Potential Literature, France's longest, and most active, literary movement. He is the author of over a dozen books, including the novels Cigarettes, TheJournalist, and Tlooth.

Reviews for My Life in CIA: A Chronicle of 1973

Hang out with spies in distant Asian capitals, offend French communists, smoke ever so slightly expensive cigars, have no visible means of support-and the locals are likely to ask questions about a person. So Mathews (The Human Country, 2002, etc.), expatriate novelist, learns. Well before 1973, his annus mirabilis, sundry residents of Paris suspected him of being a CIA agent, assuring him that it didn't really matter but pleading that he confide the truth in them. It hurt to be thought of as a spook, Mathews writes. Not because by that time it had become shameful but because it was simply wrong. Farther afield, Mathews relates in a wonderful anecdote, a Filipino doctor reaches the same hurtful conclusion; when Mathews protests that he's a writer and quotes verbatim from the works of Gerard Manley Hopkins by way of proof, the doctor responds, How glad I am to see that the CIA is training its men so well. An unlikelier agent there probably has never been: Mathews, after all, is the only American to have been invited into Oulipo, the French literature-meets-science movement whose best-known exemplar is Georges Perec's full-length novel in which the letter e never appeared, and in 1973 Mathews was occupying himself with progressive causes and, from time to time, explicating the bad-capitalism twists and turns of what the French were calling le ouateurguete, Watergate. ( There was a lot of arguing among members of the audience. This helped me look sober and well-informed, which I certainly wasn't. ) One of Mathews's literary champions, though, turns out to be a chap who just happens to work for Zapata Oil, owned by George H.W. Bush, a man with, yes, close connections to the CIA. Unlikely, too, are the twists and turns his fictional memoir takes, punctuated by little cloak-and-dagger episodes and even a spectacular moment of wetwork among the wine-and-cheese picnics al fresco. Did these things happen? Is Mathews really Jonathan Hemlock? This isn't much help in answering such questions, but it's a lot of fun. (Kirkus Reviews)


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