Christopher Hull, PhD, is Senior Lecturer in Spanish & Latin American Studies at the University of Chester. His research focuses on British interactions with Latin America. He first visited Cuba in 1997 and has traveled extensively around the island during seventeen further visits, often in the footsteps of Graham Greene. He lives in England.
"A lively and informative work. Hull wraps his literary, cinematic,
and political history in a pocket-biography of Greene, tailored to
set the author’s espionage story in context."
*Wall Street Journal*
"A focused and entertaining account of the making of Greene’s novel
of espionage, Our Man in Havana. Hull’s book is a delicious
companion to the tale Greene confected from the incompetence of
spooks and an island in turmoil."
*The Economist*
"Hull minutely examines the plot, characters, context, creation,
reception, filming, and afterlife of Greene's 1958 satirical
novel, Our Man in Havana. Drawing on Greene's published and
unpublished writings; studies and biographies of Greene; abundant
archival material; and his own 17 visits to Cuba, Hull sets
Greene's life amid Cuba's tumultuous history. A biography notable
for its deep research."
*Kirkus Reviews*
"Hull tells a marvelous story. His research is, frankly, humbling:
he has found many documents that no one has read before and many
witnesses who have never been interviewed. The book is vivid and
accurate in ways that most other works on Greene simply
aren’t."
*Library Review*
"Often insightful and always meticulous book. Those who relish
every detail of Greene’s life will find Hull’s book rewarding. A
stalwart and original contribution to Greeneology."
*Financial Times*
"Anybody interested in either Greene or Cuba will find this a
splendid read, with a trainspotterly level of detail. The best
thing about Hull’s book, however, is also the best thing about
Greene’s novel: the resurrection of Batista’s Havana in all its
delicious loucheness and horrific violence."
*The Daily Telegraph*
"Cuba meant a great deal to Greene. Hull’s Our Man Down in
Havana conjures the Cuban capital in all its tatterdemalion
glory and Afro-Caribbean collision of skin colors and
cultures."
*New Statesman*
"A completely fascinating book, immaculately researched, full of
insight and telling detail. A revelation and a delight."
*A completely fascinating book, immaculately researched, full of
insight and telling detail. A revelation and a delight.*
"Meticulously researched, impressively informative, exceptionally
well written, organized and presented."
*Midwest Book Review*
"Richly detailed and packed with insight not just into the
historical context of the novel and film, but also into the
creative process itself."
*Matthew Parker, author of 'Goldeneye: Where Bond Was Born'*
"It is the kind of obsessive book I like best—a full-body immersion
into Greeneland."
*The Spectator (UK)*
"‘Spying is eternal,’ opines George Smiley in one of John Le
Carré’s thrillers. Fiction or not, he is right. While technical
intelligence in today’s digital world floods agencies with too much
intelligence, the need for ‘humint’—spies—remains as strong as
ever. In the dirty, corrupt world of exploiting other human beings:
traitors; idealists; or just plain greedy; reality offers a darker
picture. Christopher Hull’s Our Man Down in
Havana dissects Graham Greene’s classic satire on spies with
forensic skill, exposing the rotten heart of the CIA's ‘wilderness
of mirrors.' An excellent book for intelligence professionals and
the general reader alike. Read it and ponder—sometimes fact is
stranger than fiction."
*Colonel John Hughes-Wilson, author of 'A Brief History of the Cold
War' and 'The Secret State'*
"Our Man Down in Havana conjures the Cuban capital in all its
pre-Castro glory."
*Evening Standard*
"The data for this book was compiled from an extensive range of
archival investigation and a thorough analysis of Greene’s
biography and other works. Christopher Hull’s book can productively
appeal to researchers and students working on Graham Greene’s life
and works as well as to those studying British policies in
Cuba."
*World Literature Today*
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