John le Carré bibliography

This is a list of works by or featuring David John Moore Cornwell, a British author better known by his pseudonym John le Carré. It also includes a list of film, television, and radio adaptations of le Carré's writing.

Novels

YearTitleIdentifierHighest
NYT position
reached
Number
of weeks
on NYT list
Notes
1961Call for the DeadOCLC 751303381
1962A Murder of QualityOCLC 777015390
1963The Spy Who Came in from the ColdOCLC 561198531#156number one for most of 1964
1965The Looking Glass WarOCLC 752987890#514–16weeks uncertain due to NYT strike
1968A Small Town in GermanyISBN 0-143-12260-6#228
1971The Naïve and Sentimental LoverISBN 0-143-11975-3#102
1974Tinker Tailor Soldier SpyISBN 0-143-12093-X#140
1977The Honourable SchoolboyISBN 0-143-11973-7#333
1979Smiley's PeopleISBN 0-340-99439-8#128
1983The Little Drummer GirlISBN 0-143-11974-5#134
1986A Perfect SpyISBN 0-143-11976-1#122
1989The Russia HouseISBN 0-743-46466-4#121
1990The Secret PilgrimISBN 0-345-50442-9#112
1993The Night ManagerISBN 0-345-38576-4#313
1995Our GameISBN 0-345-40000-3#29
1996The Tailor of PanamaISBN 0-345-42043-8#77
1999Single & SingleISBN 0-743-45806-0#37
2001The Constant GardenerISBN 0-743-28720-7#49
2003Absolute FriendsISBN 0-670-04489-X#39
2006The Mission SongISBN 0-340-92199-4#33
2008A Most Wanted ManISBN 1-416-59609-7#44
2010Our Kind of TraitorISBN 0-143-11972-9#73
2013A Delicate TruthISBN 0-143-12531-1#64
2017A Legacy of SpiesISBN 0-7352-2511-7[1]#16
2019Agent Running in the FieldISBN 1-9848-7887-5#51
2021SilverviewISBN 0-241-55006-8#63posthumous

Source: The New York Times Best Seller list[2] Figures are for the Adult Hardcover Fiction lists, 1961 through 2021: highest position reached and total number of weeks on list (possibly nonconsecutive). A "—" indicates it did not make the list. Note that the Times list consisted of a Top 10 from 1963 through 1976, but a Top 15 or 16 in the covered years before and after.

George Smiley omnibus volumes

Short stories

  • "Dare I Weep, Dare I Mourn?" (1967), in Saturday Evening Post, 28 January 1967
  • "What Ritual is Being Observed Tonight?" (1968), in Saturday Evening Post, 2 November 1968[3]
  • "The Writer and the Horse" (published in the US as "A Writer and A Gentleman") (1968), in The Savile Club Centenary Magazine and later in The Argosy and The Saturday Review (November 30, 1968)[4]
  • "The King Who Never Spoke" (2009), in Ox-Tales: Fire, 2 July 2009[5]

Non-fiction

Film

Screenplays

Source(s):[9]

Executive producer

Source(s):[9]

Actor

Source(s):[9]

Adaptations

After many years of working with various producers who made film adaptations of his novels, two of Cornwell's sons, Simon and Stephen, founded the production company The Ink Factory in 2010. This was to produce adaptations of his works as well as other film productions. The Ink Factory has produced the films A Most Wanted Man and Our Kind of Traitor, and the TV series The Night Manager and The Little Drummer Girl.[15]

Film

Source(s):[16]

Radio

  • The Russia House (1994), BBC Radio 4, featuring Tom Baker as Barley Blair[19]
  • The Complete Smiley (2009–2010) BBC Radio 4, an eight-part radio-play series, based on the novels featuring George Smiley, commencing with Call for the Dead, broadcast on 23 May 2009, with Simon Russell Beale as George Smiley, and concluding with The Secret Pilgrim in June 2010[20]
  • A Delicate Truth (May 2013), BBC Radio 4's Book at Bedtime, recorded by Damian Lewis[21]
  • Abridged excerpts from The Pigeon Tunnel, broadcast as BBC Radio 4's Book of the Week, commencing on 12 September 2016[22]

Television

Source(s):[16]

References