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7 - The Spy-Scattered Landscapes of Modernity in John Buchan's Mr Standfast

Christoph Ehland
Affiliation:
University of Paderborn, Germany
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Summary

Introduction

Here is breathlessness, here is ecstasy, high and proud adventuring, patriotism, comradeship, the outwitting of the arch outwitter, the breaking of a spy – a super-head-centre of German intrigue, all in the best and most rollicking kind of good form and zest.

As this enthusiastic review from the booksellers' trade journal the Bookman suggests, the publication of Mr Standfast (1919), barely a year after the end of the First World War, was extremely well received. The anonymous critic goes on to say that it is also ‘as ingenious and thrilling a war story as any we have had’. In this respect it seems fair to assume that John Buchan's Richard Hannay novels were becoming known not for their intellectual stimulation but for good, solid entertainment. Written during the First World War, the first three of the stories which feature Richard Hannay as their hero take their readers into a world of fast-moving adventures all over the battlefields of Europe and the Middle East. The Thirty-Nine Steps, set in London and Scotland, brought Buchan his first success as a writer of spy novels in 1915, and was quickly followed by the Middle Eastern adventure of Greenmantle in 1916. Of the five Richard Hannay novels, Mr Standfast is the last written under the direct influence of the War and was eventually published in 1919.

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Publisher: Pickering & Chatto
First published in: 2014

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