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Grilled habu with a lot of Spice

4/16/2014

18 Comments

 
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Lately, I’ve enjoyed reading a stack of habu’s books and wanted to find out a bit more about him and his writing. Here is his Goodreads bio:

habu, a bisexual former supersonic spy jet pilot, intelligence agent, academic, mainstream book editor, and diplomat, is a published mainstream novelist, short story writer, and essayist under other names and in another dimension of his life. He has lived extensively in East and Southeast Asia, the Middle East, and Europe as an embassy-based intelligence agent, which influences the settings and plots of many of his stories. He now lives in a picturesque and historical Midatlantic/Upper South state university town, with an accommodating spouse, where he writes, edits, teaches, and indulges himself.

Under the habu name he writes a full spectrum—and heat level—of M/M and bisexual works for the publishing houses of Excessica and BarbarianSpy. He also writes M/M historicals under the pen name Dirk Hessian, and M/M romance with coauthor Sabb under the pen name Shabbu.

For a loosely constructed travel through habu's professional life, read his “Flying High, Diving Deep”

I sent him a whole stack of questions and was overjoyed when he answered.

AB: First off, is there a need to be careful what you say or disclose because of your agency background?

H: There is a need to be “sort of” careful about my past. I was an overt employee of the Agency—had an overt job with them (with covert elements in it that just weren’t publicly acknowledged), but when I write, I use the essence of operations and relationships and settings—but not specific operations. Most are taken from open-source media coverage of events, though, and thus are free game. I have a whole series of spy novels in the mainstream that I passed through Agency clearance, so I know where the allowable edges are in publishing. Beyond that, there is the “NSA” syndrome working. Citizens are aghast at the revelation of the extent of NSA surveillance on them. It’s gone on for, like, forever, though, and folks who have been on the inside, as I have been, know that the collection effort and take are so huge that there’s nearly a zero possibility that the dots would be connected on me—or that anyone would see me as someone worth pursuing—I know I’m not doing anything actionable. And leading from that, what I write from in my spy writings isn’t activity the Agency wants publicly discussed anyway, so that’s insurance in itself. I can write a lot of truth that the general populace insists is fantasy.

AB: I gather members of the SAS never admit to being part of the regiment and always talk down what they do, even to family and friends. Is it the same in the agency, everyone is a data analyst never a field operative?

H: Most Agency—and other intelligence organizations—employees are actually overt employees. The covert ones won’t own up to covert work, no. But there’s a layer of overt employees who also do this and that on the covert side—not to the extent that Tom Clancy drew them in his novels, though. These employees use the overt work to cover anything else. In my case, when I worked overseas, there was veneer of “cultural affairs officer” that was spread over everything I did—and much of what I did (and used as an opening to do other things) was legitimately cultural affairs. (It just gave more meaning to the “affairs” word that most would assume.)

AB: Has agency work made you more cynical?

H: Yes, my work in intelligence did make me quite cynical—and jaded.

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AB: Fetish Galore was the first of yours that I read. Was that just a compilation of kink stories you'd written at that time, or did you write them specifically?

H: Fetish Galore is a compendium of stories addressing the breadth of what I would put into GM fetish. Many of the stories existed before I put the anthology together. Others were written subsequently for this collection to add new fetishes.

AB: What aspect about BDSM appeals to you as a writer and/or as a participant? Physically and/or psychologically.

H: Dealing with the forbidden, in general, appeals to me as a writer. But while personally,  I have no problem with things like multiple partners in succession. I am not into full on BDSM.

Some mild bondage (where I could break free if/when I really wanted to) appealed to me as a participant, but I’m not really much into fear, delayed satisfaction, violence, or physical pain 

I don’t mind role playing of being incapacitated and taken, in a sense, against my will. But that isn’t a rape sensation for me—it’s one combining having no share of the guilt that it’s happening and the awe of having some hunk so out of control in wanting me that he’d do this. When it spills over into physical torture, it moves more into a hate category, and I don’t go there except in my writing to serve a particular audience.

Mind you, I can be aroused in doing so. 

AB: You mention trying the sounds so you would know what they were like but not liking that loss of control, yet, your characters are often depicted as having to submit to a stronger person, isn't that a form of losing control?

H: I was a spy. *smile* I see it as a form of controlling the “needy/almost out of control” taker in his actions. When one of my sub characters submits, it’s happening in my mind as a “Ha, now I’ve got you, you big, beautiful hunk.” This is bread and butter tradecraft. Give them what they want under the conditions where they think they are in control, and they’ll let their guard down and spill their guts, thinking they control and are safe. I pretty much establish in my stories that what the sub wants to come away with is a good fucking, so if he does, it wasn’t really a very good BDSM sub situation.

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A fetish of mine is a smaller man (doesn’t have to be younger but he often is in my stories to reach that audience) being controlled and taken by a bigger man. I’m not a small man myself, but I did gravitate to men who were more muscular than I was and older (more experienced).

I write my sounding stories because I read more than once that there is a scarcity in the market for such works. I’m a writer; I go toward the underserved markets when I can do so and still enjoy the story weaving.

AB: Flying High is described as a semi-factual memoir. Do you or, did you, find writing these books cathartic?

H: Yes, the stories in Flying High (which is out in two editions from two different publishers and two similar but different titles) were cathartic. I had all of these memories bottled up inside me. In discussions with my cyber “other” (who is Sabb, also one of my publishers and a coauthor of GM erotica) experiences long dormant inside me were being pulled out and written up in story form, using the essence of real life in real life settings. These surfaced at various times and were assembled into Flying High. Since writing that, Sabb has “pulled” more from me which now appear as other stories that filled chronological holes. If I added these, the work would be twice as long.

When these get pulled out of me, I look back and think both that, god, I was having a good time in my sexually active life (which didn’t start until I was almost 30) and, god was I ever a slut. Both of those thoughts make me smile, though.

AB: Which do you think is your best book/anthology?

H: This is really hard to answer, as I don’t feel I’ve written too many duds (As any narcissistic writer would think.)—and I have well over 100 works of erotica in pen names in the market. I like my use of history and unnamed famous people, mostly ones I’ve had the privilege of meeting, in my novellas and novellas—such as Homeward Bound (paralleling Thomas Wolfe), The Handyman (a construct of gay male (GM) activity in a New England town over centuries), Brambleton (a takeoff on the relationships and emotions in Brideshead Revisited), Cairo Surrender (bringing up Cairo of the 20s and depicting bondage, seduction, and domination) and Home to Fire Island, are ones by habu that I consider to be literary and favorites of mine.

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Dirk Hessian’s Constantinople was deeply researched and came out quite well, I thought. Luther uses perceptions of the weakness and vulnerability of mental disability to turn the concept on its head and, I hope, to amuse in a way that has the reader cheering for Luther. I’ll have to stop there, but I could go on—nearly every one of my books was written to explore some theme and is like a child to me.

Concerning anthologies, I write two different kinds (and I also write ongoing series, like my Clint Folsom detective series). One kind of anthology is truly standalone stories—and I write two varieties of that. The themed anthologies have an overarching concept to them: first time, fetishes, rough stories, romances, geographical regions, time periods, I even have one where each story features dogs, and so forth. 

I think Bitten Peach, all-oriental stories, many from ancient times, is a standout in this grouping—as is Man’s Man, the stories of an unabashed high-market male hooker. But I have to slap my hand not to pull out six or seven others I think are notable. Then there is my Grab Bag, eclectic collection anthologies, which are composed of loose stories dropping from my muse over a period of time. The fifth edition of this comes out soon, and the sixth one is already building.

AB: You've already mentioned that you've done a few versions of Tuscan Twilight. I can see how you could twist the end with various motives and changing the sexes of the participants. What does this spring from? Is it a fascination with motives? Is it a lag over from your days as an analyst?

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H: As a writer, I like to recast the same scenario with a different theme or emphasis. With Tuscan Twilight—designed to show with separate chapters how the separate sexual preferences can travel through a coherent story line—I saw that one of these stories, extracted and recast, for the Fifty Seventy anthology could work with a skewed theme and setup. I was quite pleased with the original, and I could be quite pleased with a repurposing recast—and be quite pleased with both of them as well. The original wasn’t sacrosanct.

Might add, on my writing technique, that I don’t agonize on a draft. A write, a review, and off to the editor. When it comes back, unlike most people who are faced with trimming, I add detail. But, again, I don’t do a lot of rewrites. I lose my voice and the spontaneity of the storytelling when I do that.

AB: Another one along this line is the Egyptian Initiation/Indian Doctor/Witness for the Prosecution where the same scenario is used, but in the latter, the question of guilt and non-con vs dub-con comes in. First off, on a slightly different slant, if this happened in real life, have your feelings/attitude toward it changed and has this led to these variations?

H: The “Egyptian Initiation” version of this storyline—which, yes, comes out of my initial, surprised, and total deflowering in male-male sex uses an Egyptian because I wasn’t quite ready in the initial story to acknowledge that he was an Indian. At the time,  I wasn’t comfortable with my contact with Indians (Asian Indians) hence it was all the more mysterious that it was an Indian who seduced me—and not just in a fumbling one-time event, but in a progression of takings in nearly every way possible—that I kept coming back for.

I pretty quickly saw this as a release of the floodgates on what I wanted—and was too taken with myself to even realize that. I see it now as a welcome release too, so I guess my attitude hasn’t changed, no. But I was 28, married to a much more openly experienced woman, and had been so narcissistic that I hadn’t realized before then when I was being hit on by both women and men. So the change in attitude came at that point, I guess—being, essentially, seduced by my to-be wife.

AB: Do you enjoy stretching yourself as a writer, for example “New Man at the Village Café” from RoughRiders. How do you describe that? Second person POV? The narrator addresses the reader as if they are the other character?]

H: I approach every write from the aspect of “what new element/style/ technique/scenario/theme/ emotion/ atmosphere” can I bring to this. I think the “New Man” is probably my most hated work by most readers. But I think the emotions are as real as they are raw and that they expose an aspect of the actively cruising gay lifestyle.

Second person only works for me in highly charged, very short bursts of a story. I write in third person sometimes, but I find first person the most intimate and often find myself drifting into that even when I’m writing third person. I don’t sit down and think about what person to write in when I begin a story, though. I don’t think about any technical issue when I sit down and write a story. I just sit down and start writing and let it go its natural way.

AB: Do you get much direct feedback for your books. Another writer, Ryan Field, says he gets very little via Amazon and Goodreads, but he gets quite a few emails.

H: I get some feedback, the most interesting in e-mails. I don’t get nearly what I would like to get because so many of my stories have what I think are interesting tidbits of philosophy or fact behind them that I didn’t put in the story—I’m not an “everything and the kitchen sink” writer.

I am writing so much of the time that I don’t take time to go out and promote what I’ve already written, so sometimes it seems like I’m just dropping these into a void—until the royalties come in and I can see that they, in fact, are selling

AB: You mention in "Renewal of Passion" that you were floating on royalties from earlier novels. When was your first book (under any name) published?

H: My first book, in the mainstream, was published in 1996. The first erotica e-book was in 2002 (so I was on that bandwagon early, but I got off of it for a while because that was too early—e-readers were being obsoleted as quickly as they were introduced—and I was doing fine in the print market. I got back into the e-book erotica market in 2006, I think).

I don’t remember the “floating on royalties” mention and don’t want to suggest that I get rich on writing erotica alone. I write erotica primarily for artistic release (and personal arousal). Probably by “float” I meant that the income there is over and above what I need to live comfortably. I’m well fixed in annuities and personal resources, so the income from all of my writing, mainstream and erotica alike, is a free-use float on top of that. For a writer, this is a good thing. I don’t have to write to put food on the table. I write to keep cruise boats in the water.

AB: You also mention writing a novel about a famous naive artist. Did that actually happen?

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H: Platres Conclave is my naïve artist novella (I prefer writing novellas. I can do so in three days and have thoroughly enjoyed writing it and am ready to go on to the next. Hallelujah to the e-book revolution for reviving the novella as a cost-effective writing project) Her fame is relative and pretty much confined to Europe. I changed the gender and personality of that character completely, so nothing in there rebounds on the real person (except for those who know her house). Whole bunches of the rest of the novella are five-o’clock shadow close to my RL experience, though. I went to Platres to write in the hotel room where Daphne Du Maurier wrote Rebecca, I got swept up in an artists’ conclave, I got gang fucked, I walked into an art opening months later to find myself staring back at myself from the walls, in provocative poses, and to my knowledge none of my colleagues recognized me in the art work.

AB: What is coming next? What sorts of areas have you still to explore?

H: Who knows what my muse will dump on me next. I am completely under her control.

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My latest release is Eleven to the Dogs (that anthology where every story has dogs in it—not in a sexual sense, of course).  Harmony and Dissonance (a tale of bi seduction at the Thai royal summer palace) is now in edit, and in the queue at this point (I publish a new story about every two weeks) are Caribbean Cruise Top to Bottom (built from a glance at two men at a table near me on a recent Caribbean cruise), and Ravens Roost (a relaunch and recast of a book published by another publisher four years ago). In edit is War Is Hell and Heaven (loosely built on the shooting of my father in WWII and a GM fantasy building up to that). In final review by me is Grab Bag 5. In advanced building stage is Stallion Station (BDSM at a male bordello). 

I have several works published four years ago that I have pulled and am reworking and will be republished over the year. I also have a reader-requested expansion of the story “9:30 Bus from Abilene” in the works. Then, yes, there are entirely new works on the schedule beyond that. I publish more than 30 works to the erotica marketplace each year.

Even my historical novellas pen name Dirk Hessian is planning a short story compendium, Before All That, which will provide prequel stories to most of his eleven published novellas.

AB: Obviously this change of name is because they are aimed at different audiences, but are you "out" as a writer of gay erotica? How much does your family/colleagues know? Do they read your books?

H: My friends and family have no idea I write erotica. I write mainstream too and am prolific in both, so they only see the mainstream. The erotica is, like Graham Greene’s and Ian Fleming’s novels were for them, an entertainment and tension reliever for me. Only my wife knows I’m bi—she was before me. She doesn’t know I’m writing erotica now, though.

I like not being a notable author in public.

AB: In my review, I made a comment about you having the knack to sum up people and situations pretty succinctly. Was that a product of your agency days? Are you a people watcher even now?

H: Yes, the succinct style in both characterization and overall storytelling is from my analytical days. What I wrote went to top policy makers. The mantra was “give me your best and most comprehensive 300 words and put the very best on the top, because they are extremely busy and will stop reading into even 300 words at some point.” I don’t structure the stories as I would intel analysis, but I try not to include anything superfluous and I try to evoke a good enough image in the reader’s mind with as little description as possible. It’s a good thing if different readers latch onto different images of a character. This isn’t only from my analytical background, though. I paint Chinese-style abstract watercolors, where we are taught to render the essence of the subject in as few brush strokes as possible.

This is where my adding to rather than trimming from stories in the review rounds comes in, though.

I do observe people on occasion for use in stories. (For instance, the coming Caribbean Cruise Top to Bottom is built entirely from seeing a young man at a table during a recent cruise attending to an older man. What was assumed was a father-son relationship opened up in possibility when the young man took his foot out of his shoe and rubbed the ankle of the older man with it.) I can’t say that I write from observation as much as from experience, though. I’m now a recluse—holed up most of the time in my home office and pecking away at the computer. (When I’m not spending my royalties on foreign vacations, of course.)

AB: I gather with the diplomatic service there is a lot of kudos in getting certain postings. Did you have much choice about where they sent you?

H: I was trained for East, Southeast, and South Asia and the Middle East. That’s where I went, which was a miracle, because the joke in the service was that you studied one region in the university, got your government job on the basis of how well you studied that region, and then were sent to some other region.

Early in my career I was given some choice on postings. The system changed later in my career to where one had to bid on the post one wanted. Some folks were offered something other than they bid on if they couldn’t get their declared choices. With me it was somewhat different. The early tours built relationships and liaisons that were the basis of my assignments. Later in my career I was sent back to where I had earlier served to reopen those relationships.

AB: Tell me more about your Middle East days. Where were you based?  When was that? Was your family with you?

H: I lived in Cyprus, which is the safehaven of the Middle East. (I’d say “some Mediterranean island, but, since so many of my stories are set in Cyprus, that dog don’t bark anymore). My work took me throughout the region, though. My family was stationed there too.

AB: I'm going to list a few stories, do any of these have an underlying kernel of truth or did something prompt them (another writer's story perhaps)

Hidden Flute

H: No factual basis—only the theme of some of this work being noxious—and the one having to do the work not always carrying out the noxious part.

Staying Retired

H: No personal truth. A study in tradecraft—but pushing it to extremes. I’ve seen “I’ll grab intel and deny you intel to get ahead,” but not on this lethal level. But that’s the theme that prompted this.

Malta Intervention (this was probably the "gayest" of your stories I've read so far)

H: This was prompted by an artist friend of a friend being suborned by a little snit who then wanted to isolate him from his friends and control him to the point of damaging his art. No personal connections beyond that. Just capturing that it happens in the gay lifestyle. I like Malta, though, and I liked the scene setup. This was me standing off and looking at a RL situation—and then writing it up from just that nub in a fictional way.

Home to Fire Island

H: Memories of a “want to be carefree for this time” weekend on Fire Island. Beyond that, what the protagonist was struggling with was what was going through my mind when my muse decided to marry those concerns with that location.

AB: Talk about hardass bosses "fucking you over" I loved that last paragraph of Ethiopian Cabin Boy: "He probably will even tell me it's my reward for an assignment well done." Is Sam Winterberry based on the older version of you? 

H: Oh, no. I had Sam Winterberrys as bosses—we called them controllers or handlers (even to the extent of vetting me himself for assignments), and my treatment of his character is my one-finger salute to some bosses in the past, but I was never a boss in this particular area of assignment. I wanted to capture the nastiness and domination of some if the men in these positions, though. This character pops up from time to time in my “Candy Store” works. I’m having fun with him.

AB: Thank you so much,  for agreeing to be “grilled” Your insights into how you write and the backgrounds to your stories adds an even richer dimension to them.

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COMPETITION

Habu has kindly offered to donate a copy of any ebook
from his backlist.

On April 30, I will choose the winner from people who have left a comment either on Facebook, Goodreads or my Blog page.
All you have to do is say you’re interested in participating,
which book you'd like to win and why.
The winner will be announced on May 1 along with instructions on how to claim your prize.


How about checking out his latest release
Caribbean Cruise Top to Bottom
18 Comments

Some Good Examples of Gay Fiction

4/10/2014

0 Comments

 
After I posted my last blog, I remembered a blog that William Maltese did ages ago on Jessewave, exploring whether there were two types of m/m.

Even describing what the blog was about adds to the argument. He maintained that there are two types of m/m. A heated debate subsequently erupted about whether it was because one is written BY men and one BY women, or was it because one is written FOR men and the other FOR women.

The 158 comments discussed this topic at length, with people arguing you coudn't (shouldn't?) generalise. However, the fact that the debate is still around shows that there IS a difference if nothing else.

The books reviewed here are definitely written by a male. I categorise them as gay fiction. Some might call them gay erotica, but there are plots and the sex, while graphic, is not the most important part.

The question then arises: "Is it just males who will enjoy them?"  Why not read them and find out.
Fifty SeventyFifty Seventy by Habu
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I was intrigued to read this anthology of October-December stories because the subject has interested me ever since I wrote a book with a May-December age gap and, through that, met another writer, Don Schecter who tackles the theme in his stories. (He is now in his late seventies).

Since then, I've got to know Don quite well, and he regularly beta reads my stories. Over time, we have discussed his feelings about age and the different relationships he has with younger men, so the topic is quite familiar to me, hence my interest in how Habu treats the same theme.

It probably helps that I'm in the November category myself, so I understand the changes in both body and desire. I have contemporaries in vastly different stages of health and happiness. Some former superfit people are on a slew of medications. Others have put on weight and lost fitness. Getting older is the pits but the alternative is worse.

This collection begins with the concept of age being a state of mind. A more confident older man challenges a fifty year old to stop being an observer of life and to get out and live it. This is a great lesson for everyone. Time seems to accelerate as we age and if we're not proactive about creating and ticking off that bucket list, it will be gone and we will have done nothing. Inertia rules, okay.

The next one was an older more confident executive moving confidently in on another at a crossroads in his life. Once again, he learned that you have to believe in yourself, so you can grab opportunities as soon as they become available.

The next story, "Play On" had a tennis coach who hadn't lost any of his cunning or sex drive. Told from the viewpoint of a younger man who had always felt totally out of his depth, we get this same reaction as he blunders helplessly along, despite his age, still a pawn of an older man.

Tennis is again the theme of the next story which is set in a retirement community. For a change, the author has three elderly females putting their spin on what they are seeing. Then we see what actually happens in a tender, heart warming encounter and finally we switch back to the three original onlookers. This was the perfect way to show this simple but heartwarming reaffirmation that grief may be there, but happiness can still be found no matter how old you are.

"Tempting Memory" has a lovely twist in it. This story of the ageing rocker with his even older, manager lover was a treatise on memory as the title suggests. How much we owe to what has gone before. It's a story about loyalty as much as anything. Even if that is all that there is left.

The final tale "Tuscan Memory" also appears as a standalone Tuscan Twilight
This explores how much are we ruled by who we are and where we are. And poses the unspoken question, what happens when duty and tradition take precedence over following personal desires. What happened in the past was only mentioned, yet it was amazing how strongly that reverberated.

What the author did well, as usual, was creating with only a few words, characters who have their own distinctive story arc and baggage. You quickly appreciate that the Conte, Damien and Dakota have very different agendas. But each feels justified in their own actions, both past and present. The setting adds a beautiful backdrop to it.

The preoccupation with appearance and physical beauty is a common thread as well as the ability to perform. Yet each character is different and each situation different.

This ability to quickly depict unique individuals is the biggest strength of Habu's writing. No doubt this stems from his job as an intelligence analyst, having to sum up thousands of words in his reports to his superiors and accurately portraying the strengths and weaknesses of the people involved and the situation they were dealing with.

I just wish he'd make a decent bibliography of his short stories and show where and when they appear in his anthologies. Switching titles slightly adds to the confusion. Luckily in this instance, I hadn't bought Tuscan Twilight, but I would have been annoyed if I did later and discovered I had it in an anthology.

His anthologies are good value, money wise, and are an excellent way to sample his writing.

These are the sorts of stories that I think people jaded with mm romance might like. They show men with all their fears, flaws and fantasies. And if the sex is impersonal and physical, lacking much emotional connection, maybe they are a more honest depiction of the situation, romance tropes notwithstanding.
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Spy Tails 001 (Gay Male Spy Tales)Spy Tails 001 by Habu
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This review also pertains to the follow up book Spy Tails 002. I'm not going to go through every story, just give an overview.

According to his Goodreads bio, habu "has lived extensively in East and Southeast Asia, the Middle East, and Europe as an embassy-based intelligence agent, which influences the settings and plots of many of his stories."

Apparently, he has experienced first hand the levels at which an Agency supposedly disapproving of homosexuality is happy to go to when it suits them.

A lot of the plots revolve around honey traps -- or the "Candy Store" as he puts it -- where leverage is obtained by giving someone what they want rather than torturing them.

The impact this has on the agent is lightly touched on, but never in depth which is a shame. You can tell some are happy to be used and abused, others have more difficulty coming to terms with it.

As could be expected, there are twists, backstabbing and betrayal.

And lots and lots of sex.

Some stories show how dangerous it is if feelings become involved.

Others show the irony that underlines a lot of intelligence gathering. One of my favorites was "Golden Question" in Spy Tails 002. Not so much for the plot or sex (they were fine) but because it captured what I feel is a little understood part of intelligence gathering, the accumulation of facts that aren't world shattering, just a "need to know". I loved the bit where the Green Berets had actually trained the Turks for covert operations, but they couldn't ask them where they were going to be deployed, as that might convey tacit approval. Reminded me of the Aussie SAS training the Kopassus!

Some stories show how just a little tweak can drastically change the course of events, but in real life, critics rarely balance this out, preferring to argue about the amount of time, money and effort spent gathering what ends up to be useless information. Who is to know what is important or not? Certainly not the person collecting it. That is the nature of the profession.

Perhaps what they should be debating is the damage this does on the lives and loves of those involved. Covert activities by civilians can also result in them suffering from PTSD, especially when lives are affected by their reports or actions, but is this ever taken into account?

Do we ever see the great John le Carré character, Smiley, actually smiling?

And if you're wondering whether a Government funded agency would ever allow this to happen? The author reassures the reader by stating:
This anthology is pure fiction.
Nothing like this would happen in the real intelligence world. Wipe from your mind even the slightest thought that anything like this has already happened in the collection of intelligence down through the ages. There would never be a special unit in U.S. intelligence, for instance, that collected intelligence the time-honored way—by providing sexual favors and subornation. There would never be an Agency special unit informally known as the Candy Store. This unit would not have five informally separated sections: male on female, female on male, male on male, female on female, and anything goes. There would certainly be no use of male homosexuality, and society’s censure of that, to recruit and control foreign intelligence assets as is fantasized."
That's a relief. Lol.


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    A.B.Gayle

    This is a collection of reviews I've posted at Goodreads and
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