“HE THOUGHT: I MUST DO SOMETHING, GIVE THEM SOME NAMES TO TRACE, RECRUIT AN AGENT, KEEP THEM HAPPY”: FIRST EDITION OF GREENE’S OUR MAN IN HAVANA
GREENE, Graham. Our Man in Havana. An Entertainment. London: Heinemann, (1958). Octavo, original blue cloth, original dust jacket.
First edition of Greene’s subtly ironic novel set in 1950s Cuba, English actor Anthony Steel’s copy, with his ownership signature.
Originally intended as a story about spies working within the German Secret Service, the idea was shelved until Graham Greene later visited Havana. It “suddenly struck him that in that city, ‘where every vice was permissible and every trade possible,” the novel would find its ideal home. Critic and fellow one-time secret agent, Malcolm Muggeridge called Our Man in Havana, “the most brilliant book on intelligence that’s ever been written because it gets inside the whole fantasy… the way people get caught up” (Sherry III:106). Greene also wrote the screenplay for the 1959 movie, which was filmed in Cuba and directed by Carol Reed, their third film together, and starred Alec Guinness, Noel Coward, and Maureen O’Hara. Miller 37a. Steel was best known for his roles in 1950s British war films, most notably The Wooden Horse (1950), and for his tumultuous marriage to Swedish actress Anita Ekberg.
A fine copy.