The Hardliners is a later Haggard, but fortunately Colonel Charles Russel has only just retired and Haggard seems to still keep his creepy old-man fantasies on a tighter leash. The temptation is there, though, as once again Russel is drawn into action at the request of a younger woman, a columnist and the daughter of a pompous ambassador. More importantly, she was one of Russel's informants when he was back at the Executive and he respects her work. Her father is preparing to publish his memoirs and is weirdly over-excited about the chance of their success. She suspects that he is going to reveal some secrets from his posting an Eastern Bloc country that could put himself and both England and this country at risk. The country is not named but it's pretty clear that it is a Czechoslovakian analog. It was recently invaded by Russia (also barely mentioned by name) and now stable, but if the ambassador's secret is made public, it will allow Russia to fully clamp down on the country. So this country's spies have an interest in suppressing the memoirs, while Russia and its agents want them to come to light.
Fortunately, the emphasis here is on the intrigue and the action (of which there is more than usually for a Haggard book). We get only one restaurant scene and Haggard's mid-century culinary advice is kept to a minimum. Likewise, even though it's clear Russel is crushing on the journalist (so many lines to describe how admirable she is and what a good wife she would make), he never crosses the line, just drives expertly and gives good advice. You can see the edges of Haggard's fraying post-war conservatism, but it's not annoying.
The calm climax takes place in a cool Russian safe house, owned by an independently wealthy communist-sympathizing artist way out on some marshes. One of the themes of The Hardliners is the prevalence of left-wing sympathy among the noble elites (who of course, Haggard is always at pains to point out, live in material comfort themselves). These guys are almost always total stools of the actual scary commie spies and one of them here really gets his comeuppance.
The Hardliners was a solid espionage story, nothing spectacular but kind of fun.



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