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Alan Furst
View on WikipediaAlan Furst (/fɜːrst/; born 1941) is an American author of historical spy novels. Furst has been called "an heir to the tradition of Eric Ambler and Graham Greene," whom he cites along with Joseph Roth and Arthur Koestler as important influences. Most of his novels since 1988 have been set just prior to or during the Second World War and he is noted for his successful evocations of Eastern European peoples and places during the period from 1933 to 1944.
Key Information
Biography
[edit]Furst was born in New York City, and raised on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. His family has ancestors in Poland, Latvia, and Russia. His great-grandfather was drafted into the Russian army, and, as a Jew, was required to serve 20 years.[1]
He attended the Horace Mann School, received a B.A. from Oberlin College in 1962, and an M.A. from Penn State in 1967.
While attending general studies courses at Columbia University, he became acquainted with Margaret Mead, for whom he later worked. Before becoming a full-time novelist, Furst worked in advertising and wrote magazine articles, most notably for Esquire, and as a columnist for the International Herald Tribune.
Early writings
[edit]Furst's papers were obtained by the Harry Ransom Center at The University of Texas at Austin. They include a 1963 letter from his grandfather, Max Stockman, which urged Furst to become a teacher and 'write as a sideline' in his spare time. The collection also includes early articles on a wide variety of topics, published in many magazines for which no common denominator can be found, including Architectural Digest, Elle, Esquire, 50 Plus, International Herald Tribune, Islands, New Choices, New York, The New York Times, Pursuits, Salon, and Seattle Weekly.
The Ransom collection remarks: "Of note is the April 1984 Esquire article, 'The Danube Blues,' which sparked Furst's interest in writing espionage novels. Numerous slides of his 1983 Danube trip are also available. Unproduced screenplays include 'Heroes of the Last War' (1984), and 'Warsaw' (1992)."
His early novels (1976–1983) achieved limited success. One item, held in the Ransom collection, includes the manuscript for "One Smart Cookie" (with Debbi Fields, 1987), a commissioned biography of the owner of the Mrs. Fields Cookies company.[2]
The year 1988 saw publication of Night Soldiers—inspired by his 1984 trip to Eastern Europe on assignment for Esquire—which invigorated his career and led to a succession of related titles. His output since 1988 includes a dozen works. He is especially noted for his successful evocations of Eastern European peoples and places during the period from 1933 to 1944. While all his historical espionage novels are loosely connected (protagonists in one book might appear as minor characters in another), only The World at Night and Red Gold share a common plot.
Writing in The New York Times, the novelist Justin Cartwright says that Furst, who lives in Sag Harbor, Long Island, "has adopted a European sensibility."[3] Awarded a Fulbright teaching fellowship in 1969, Furst moved to Sommières, France, outside of Montpellier, and taught at the University of Montpellier. He later lived for many years in Paris, a city that he calls "the heart of civilisation" which figures significantly in all his novels.
In 2011, the Tulsa Library Trust in Tulsa, Oklahoma selected Furst to receive its Helmerich Award, a literary prize given annually to honor a distinguished author's body of work.[4]
In 2012, he appeared in a documentary about the life and work of author W. Somerset Maugham, Revealing Mr. Maugham.[5]
Works
[edit]Stand-alone novel
[edit]- Shadow Trade (1983)
Roger Levin
[edit]- Your Day in the Barrel (1976)
- The Paris Drop (1980)
- The Caribbean Account (1981)
Night Soldiers novels
[edit]- Night Soldiers (1988)
- Dark Star (1991)
- The Polish Officer (1995)
- The World at Night (1996)
- Red Gold (1999)
- Kingdom of Shadows (2000)
- Blood of Victory (2003)
- Dark Voyage (2004)
- The Foreign Correspondent (2006)
- The Spies of Warsaw (2008)
- Spies of the Balkans (2010)
- Mission to Paris (2012)
- Midnight in Europe (2014)
- A Hero of France (2016)
- Under Occupation (2019)
Crossovers
[edit]Secondary characters who appear in more than one Furst novel include:
- Ilya Goldman, NKVD (Night Soldiers, Dark Star, Kingdom of Shadows, The Foreign Correspondent)
- Sascha Vonets, NKVD (Night Soldiers, mentioned in Dark Star)
- Ivan Ivanovich Agayants, NKVD (Night Soldiers, Dark Star)
- Colonel Vassily Antipin (Night Soldiers, Red Gold)
- General Bloch, GRU (Night Soldiers, Dark Star)
- Renate Braun, Comintern foreign specialist (Night Soldiers, Dark Star)
- Maltsaev, NKVD (Night Soldiers, Dark Star)
- Voyschinkowsky, The Lion of the Bourse (Night Soldiers, Dark Star, The Polish Officer, Kingdom of Shadows, The Foreign Correspondent)
- Colonel Anton Vyborg, Polish military intelligence (Dark Star, The Polish Officer, The Spies of Warsaw)
- Captain Degrave (The World At Night, Red Gold)
- Count Janos Polanyi (Kingdom of Shadows, Blood of Victory, The Foreign Correspondent, Mission To Paris, Midnight in Europe)
- S. Kolb, British agent (Dark Voyage, The Foreign Correspondent, Spies of the Balkans, briefly in Midnight in Europe, A Hero of France)
- Max de Lyon, spy and owner of Le Cygne night club (Midnight in Europe, A Hero of France)
- Stavros, spy and friend of Max de Lyon (Midnight in Europe, A Hero of France)
- Dr. Lapp, Abwehr (Kingdom of Shadows, The Spies of Warsaw; mentioned in Blood of Victory)
- Boris Balki, Russian emigre bartender in Paris (Kingdom of Shadows, mentioned in Blood of Victory)
- Mark Shublin, Polish painter (Kingdom of Shadows, The Spies of Warsaw)
- Louis Fischfang, screenwriter (The Foreign Correspondent, The World at Night; is mentioned a few times, but does not appear, in Red Gold)
- Lady Marensohn, American/British agent (Night Soldiers, The World at Night)
- Jean Casson, a film producer and protagonist of The World At Night and Red Gold, is mentioned, but does not appear, in Mission To Paris)
- Ivanic, NKVD assassin (The World At Night, Red Gold)
- Cara Dionello, Nicholas Morath's Argentine girlfriend (Kingdom Of Shadows, The Foreign Correspondent)
- British intelligence operatives in Europe (mainly Paris), such as
- Lady Angela Hope (appears in Night Soldiers and Dark Star; mentioned in Red Gold, The Foreign Correspondent, Kingdom of Shadows, Blood of Victory)
- Roddy Fitzware (Night Soldiers, Dark Star)
- Mr. Brown (Night Soldiers, Blood of Victory, Dark Voyage, The Foreign Correspondent)
- Momo Tsipler & his Wienerwald Companions, a night-club act (Dark Star, Blood of Victory and The Foreign Correspondent)
- Brasserie Heininger, Paris restaurant (every book; inspired by the real-life Bistro Bofinger[6])
- Nicea, a tramp freighter (Dark Star, The Polish Officer)
References
[edit]- ^ Henderson, Genie Chipps. "Alan Furst: Spying on The Past". PublishersWeekly.com.
- ^ Charles McGrath (14 June 2008). "Shadowy World of Spies, Created in a Secluded Studio". The New York Times. Retrieved 12 April 2012.
- ^ Justin Cartwright (26 April 2010). "Cloak and Swagger". The New York Times. Retrieved 12 April 2012.
- ^ David Harper, "Spy novelist Alan Furst chosen for 2011 Helmerich Award", Tulsa World, March 6, 2011.
- ^ Guillen, Michael (22 June 2012). "The Evening Class: FRAMELINE36: REVEALING MR. MAUGHAM (2012)—The Evening Class Interview With Michael House". The Evening Class. Retrieved 21 July 2019.
- ^ "McLaughlin, John. Personal Tour: Alan Furst's Paris".
External links
[edit]- Alan Furst.net
- Our Best Thriller Writer Archived 2005-09-07 at the Wayback Machine
- Inventory of Alan Furst Papers 1961-2005 Archived 2012-02-10 at the Wayback Machine at the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center at the University of Texas at Austin.
- Writers Reflect with Alan Furst at the Harry Ransom Center
Alan Furst
View on GrokipediaBiography
Early Life
Alan Furst was born on February 20, 1941, in New York City to Jewish American parents of European immigrant heritage.[2] As an only child raised by older parents, he grew up on Manhattan's Upper West Side during the 1940s and 1950s, a neighborhood populated by many Jewish families and recent émigrés from Europe. His grandparents had immigrated from Eastern Europe.[9][4][10] His father worked in the millinery business, while his mother took on work to support the family starting at age 51.[11][4] Furst's childhood unfolded amid the vibrant, gritty urban landscape of post-World War II New York, where he often wandered the streets alone or with friends, fostering an early fascination with the city's eclectic mix of people and stories.[12] The era's lingering echoes of global conflict were ever-present in his community, shaped by the collective trauma of Jewish families like his own who had ties to wartime Europe.[9] This environment of resilience and remembrance subtly informed his worldview, though he was too young to have personal memories of the war itself.[9] In his adolescent years, attending Horace Mann School on the Upper West Side, Furst encountered World War II refugees while working part-time in Brooklyn factories, where their reticent yet poignant accounts of displacement and survival ignited his interest in European history and the moral complexities of the 1930s and 1940s.[11] These interactions, marked by the refugees' guarded storytelling—"They didn’t like to talk about it, but they told me things, and the way they spoke, who they were, told me even more"—provided formative glimpses into themes of resistance and human endurance that would echo in his later literary explorations.[11]Education and Career
Furst earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in English from Oberlin College in 1962.[1] He later obtained a Master of Arts degree in English from Pennsylvania State University in 1967.[1][13] Following his graduate studies, Furst held various early professional positions that honed his writing skills, including driving a taxi in New York, writing advertising copy on the West Coast, and contributing freelance articles to magazines such as Esquire.[5] He also served as assistant director of the Seattle Arts Commission in Washington State.[4] Additionally, Furst wrote unproduced screenplays, including Heroes of the Last War (1984) and Warsaw (1992), as documented in his personal archives.[14] In Paris during the late 1980s and early 1990s, he wrote a regular column for the International Herald Tribune while supporting himself through freelance journalism.[11][5] Furst's residences played a key role in broadening his cultural perspectives. In 1969, he received a Fulbright teaching fellowship and relocated to Sommières, a village near Montpellier in southern France, where he taught at the University of Montpellier for a year, immersing himself in European life.[13] He maintained extended stays in France throughout the 1970s and beyond, including six years in Paris starting in 1987 with his wife.[5] These periods of living abroad exposed him to the nuances of French and broader European society. Eventually, in the mid-1990s, Furst settled in Sag Harbor, Long Island, New York, where he has resided since.[4][13] His prolonged immersion in France significantly influenced the atmospheric European settings that define his later works.[5]Literary Career
Early Writings
Furst's literary career began in the mid-1970s with a series of contemporary thrillers featuring the protagonist Roger Levin, a reformed drug dealer involved in various illicit schemes. His debut novel, Your Day in the Barrel (1976), published by Atheneum, centered on Levin's operations in the Pennsylvania college scene, blending elements of crime and social satire. This was followed by The Paris Drop (1980), published by Doubleday, and The Caribbean Account (1981), issued by Delacorte Press, which continued Levin's adventures in international intrigue, including a covert delivery in Europe and a high-stakes operation in the tropics. These works marked Furst's initial foray into thriller fiction, drawing on diverse topics such as underground economies and adventure. In 1983, Furst published Shadow Trade, a standalone novel with Delacorte Press that shifted toward espionage themes, following an American arms dealer navigating shadowy dealings in the Middle East. Despite this experimentation, the early novels struggled commercially, achieving limited success and receiving modest critical attention for their fast-paced narratives but limited broader appeal. Furst himself described these years as marked by professional setbacks, including multiple rejections from publishers as he honed his craft amid financial pressures. A pivotal moment came in 1984 with the publication of the short story "The Danube Blues" in Esquire magazine, which chronicled a satirical tour of Eastern Europe and hinted at Furst's emerging interest in historical settings. This piece, born from repeated rejections of his contemporary manuscripts, signaled a stylistic shift toward espionage rooted in the past, influenced briefly by his extensive travels across Europe during the 1970s and early 1980s.[14][15]Breakthrough Works
Furst's entry into the historical spy novel genre came with Night Soldiers (1988), published by Houghton Mifflin, which introduced the character of Bulgarian recruit Khristo Stoianev, who joins the Soviet intelligence service following a fascist murder in 1934 Bulgaria. This novel marked a pivotal shift in Furst's career from earlier contemporary works to espionage thrillers set against the backdrop of World War II, revitalizing his writing trajectory after years of modest success.[16][4] Building on this foundation, Furst followed with Dark Star (1991), also issued by Houghton Mifflin, which further explored pre-war European intrigue through the lens of a Soviet foreign correspondent navigating clandestine operations. By the mid-1990s, Furst transitioned publishers to Random House for The Polish Officer (1995), a taut narrative centered on a Polish army captain tasked with wartime mapping efforts in 1939. These works solidified Furst's reputation as a master of the genre, with critics praising his ability to capture the moral ambiguities of espionage.[17][18] The breakthrough novels established Furst's signature moody, atmospheric style, evoking the shadowed tensions of 1930s and 1940s Europe through subtle intrigue rather than high-octane action sequences. This approach, emphasizing historical authenticity and quiet desperation, garnered increasing acclaim and positioned Furst as a leading voice in historical fiction, influencing his subsequent output.[19]Bibliography
Standalone Novels
Alan Furst's standalone novels present self-contained narratives centered on espionage and intrigue, distinct from his interconnected series. Shadow Trade, published in 1983, marks an early outlier in Furst's oeuvre, diverging from his later World War II focus by depicting a contemporary tale of post-CIA operatives entangled in the arms trade.[20] The novel follows Nate Guyer, a dismissed CIA officer who partners with a former colleague to run clandestine operations, only to become ensnared in a deadly international black market deal involving a Bulgarian diplomat and Middle Eastern arms dealers.[21] This work builds atmospheric tension through historical detail and moral complexity, resolving its protagonist's arc independently.[2]Night Soldiers Series
The Night Soldiers series is a loosely connected collection of historical spy novels by Alan Furst, centered on espionage, resistance efforts, and the shadowy underworld of Europe from 1933 to 1945, amid the rise of fascism and World War II. Launched with the titular Night Soldiers in 1988, the series spans 15 volumes, concluding with Under Occupation in 2019, and explores the moral ambiguities of intelligence work across diverse European locales without forming a continuous narrative arc. Each installment features distinct protagonists and self-contained stories, unified by the era's geopolitical tensions, though minor character crossovers occasionally link them.[22][23] The books are best read in publication order to appreciate the evolving historical context, though their standalone nature allows flexibility. Below is the complete series in chronological publication order, including primary settings and brief overviews of their premises.| Title | Year | Primary Settings | Brief Overview |
|---|---|---|---|
| Night Soldiers | 1988 | Bulgaria, Soviet Union, Western Europe (1934–1945) | A young Bulgarian witnesses his brother's murder by fascists and is drawn into Soviet intelligence training in Moscow, embarking on covert operations across a fracturing continent as ideological conflicts intensify. |
| Dark Star | 1991 | Poland, Soviet Union, France (1930s) | A Polish journalist becomes entangled in international intrigue after uncovering Soviet secrets, navigating espionage networks from Warsaw to Paris amid the gathering storm of European war. |
| The Polish Officer | 1995 | Poland, France (1939–1941) | A Polish army intelligence officer leads desperate evacuation efforts during the German invasion, then joins the resistance in occupied France, coordinating sabotage against the Nazis. |
| The World at Night | 1996 | France, Spain (1940–1942) | A French film producer in occupied Paris turns to smuggling and intelligence work for the Allies, balancing personal risks with efforts to aid downed British airmen and undermine the Vichy regime. |
| Red Gold | 1999 | France (1940–1941) | In Nazi-occupied France, a former winemaker becomes a key figure in the early French Resistance, forging alliances to disrupt German supply lines and support escaped prisoners. |
| Kingdom of Shadows | 2000 | Hungary, France (1938–1940) | A Hungarian aristocrat in Paris is pulled into anti-Nazi plots by family ties, smuggling arms and refugees while grappling with the moral costs of covert diplomacy in pre-war Europe. |
| Blood of Victory | 2003 | Balkans, Istanbul, Paris (1940–1941) | An exiled Romanian prince works with British intelligence to secure Balkan oil resources against Axis control, weaving through neutral ports and occupied cities in a high-stakes economic espionage campaign. |
| Dark Voyage | 2004 | Netherlands, Atlantic, Mediterranean (1941) | A Dutch ship's captain leads a covert Allied operation transporting agents and saboteurs from neutral territories into Nazi-held Europe, facing submarine threats and betrayal at sea. |
| The Foreign Correspondent | 2006 | France, Spain (1938–1939) | An Italian émigré and Reuters journalist in Paris secretly contributes to an anti-fascist underground newspaper while uncovering a list of Italian Nazi sympathizers during the Spanish Civil War, highlighting personal risks in a web of exiles, lovers, and spies.[24] |
| The Spies of Warsaw | 2008 | Poland, France (1937–1939) | A French military attaché in Warsaw uncovers German invasion plans through a network of informants, balancing diplomatic tensions with personal affairs as war looms over Eastern Europe. |
| Spies of the Balkans | 2010 | Greece, Balkans (late 1930s–1941) | A senior Greek police official in Salonika aids Jewish refugees and Allied spies fleeing Nazi advances, coordinating escape routes through the turbulent Balkans on the eve of invasion. |
| Mission to Paris | 2012 | France, Germany (1938) | An American film actor arrives in Paris to star in a movie but is recruited by intelligence services to gather information on pro-Nazi sentiments in French high society. |
| Midnight in Europe | 2014 | Spain, France, Europe (1938–1939) | A Spanish lawyer in Paris assists Republican causes during the Spanish Civil War, smuggling arms and forging documents while navigating the web of European exiles and spies.[25] |
| A Hero of France | 2016 | France (1941) | An anonymous leader coordinates sabotage and rescues in occupied Paris, directing a network of resisters against Gestapo crackdowns in the early years of the French occupation.[26] |
| Under Occupation | 2019 | France (1942–1943) | In German-occupied Paris, a physicist joins the Resistance to sabotage industrial targets, collaborating with communists, Gaullists, and others in a city under tightening Nazi control. |
