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Think Thin

, ,

I read that VISTA is going to be very FAT.
Sunday at IBM Heard how many Things could be Thin.
Over Weekend Discovered 2x Thin Clients are represented in Israel too.
They Phoned me today about Citrix Web Based GotoAssist.
Barak's Comeback..
Bought Three Books to Read in Hebrew.
1) The Trouble with Islam. Irshad Manji.
2) The Middle East and the West. Bernard Lewis.
3) Nuclear Weapons in the Middle East. Shlomo Aronson.
Good Day to Think Thin...

A Perfect Spy Author John le Carré I got the Book.

Also The Drummer Girl for Maya Today 30 years Old
A Perfect Spy Author John le Carré

Country United Kingdom
Language English
Publisher Alfred A. Knopf, Inc.
Released 1986
Media Type Print (Hardback and Paperback)
Pages 475 pages (Hardback edition), 688 (Paperback edition)
ISBN ISBN 0394551419 (Hardback edition), 0671042750 (Paperback edition)
A Perfect Spy is a 1986 novel by the eminent British author David Cornwell, written under the pseudonym John le Carré.

The novel tells the tale of Magnus Pym, a long-time spy for the United Kingdom, who mysteriously disappears, leaving behind his wife and son and a number of his fellow secret agents, who suspect he may have betrayed them, not without reason--through most of his career, Magnus was also halfheartedly but helplessly cooperating with the Czechoslovak secret service. Although the book is filled with intrigue, wit, and suspense, the novel is in part an unadorned recollection of Rick, Magnus's father, who was based on le Carré's own father Ronnie.

The story itself is non-linear and told primarily in a memoir format, incorporating a number of flashbacks into Pym's childhood with the enterprising and charismatic Rick (who is a rogue and a con-man ), his early years at university, his indoctrination into the world of espionage and state secrets, and his numerous adventures on the job. In addition, the novel incorporates multiple narrators, from Pym's wife Mary to his mentor and family friend Jack Brotherhood. The various portraits gradually reveal Pym as an individual who has worked for so long at manipulating his appearance to those closest to him that in the end he is unable to hold his conflicting persona together. He has been a perfect spy, but at the cost of his soul.

The novel marks an important step in le Carré's transition from writing spy novels, albeit with more depth and less action than is typical of the genre, to writing complex character studies of individuals, some of whom happen to be spies. Many consider it to be his best work.

The BBC produced a television miniseries adaptation of the novel in 1987, starring Peter Egan as Magnus Pym.

[edit]
External links
A Perfect Spy at The Internet Movie Database
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Perfect_Spy"
Categories: Books by John le Carré | 1986 books | Spy novels | BBC television programmes | Espionage television series

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Book of My Mother Albert Cohen, Bella Cohen

Bought this book today in Hebrew.
Book of My Mother (Hardcover)
by David Coward (Foreword), Albert Cohen, Bella Cohen
Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
Translated by the author's wife almost 50 years after its original French publication, this valediction for the author's mother now appears in English for the first time. Cohen (Belle de Seigneur) begins his memoirs almost reluctantly, telling himself to "whistle softly to imagine things are not all that bad, and above all smile." The resulting portrait is of a passionately devoted mother who sold her jewels for her son's spending-money, but also of an outcast, a "timid child with her over-plump face pressed hungrily against the window of the cake shop of social life." Cohen is by turns reverential (she was "a true saint"), embarrassed ("So awkward, poor darling") and self-pitying ("God loves me so little that I am ashamed for Him"). Although his attitudes toward his dead mother are complex, descriptions of her inner life dwell cartoonishly on motherly devotion: "Like a good and faithful dog, she accepted her humble fate, which was to wait, alone in my flat and sewing for me." In this intensely public forum, Cohen seems to be coming to grips with his mother's death through all the typical stages of mourning?numbness, denial, anger, guilt?with pen in hand. Although this process is not without its bouts of melodrama ("O Maman, my youth that is no more!"), other outbursts powerfully reflect a disgust with mortality and a baffled sense of abandonment. Certain phrases ("My mother's love," "Nevermore") are repeated like incantations, or because, Cohen, says, "that is what ruminating grief is like, its jaws weakly in perpetual motion." This is a heartbreaking little volume, worth reading twice.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Language Notes
Text: English (translation)
Original Language: French