Quiller

Quiller

Quiller is the alias of a fictional spy created by English novelist Elleston Trevor and featured in a series of Cold War thrillers written under the pseudonym "Adam Hall".

The series focuses on a solitary, highly capable spy (named for Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch). This spy works, usually on his own, for a British government bureau - referred to as "The Bureau" - that "doesn't exist." Quiller narrates his own adventures, addressing the reader in an informal style with such phrases as "my very good friend." Quiller occupies a literary middle ground between James Bond and John le Carré's characters. He is a highly skilled driver, pilot, diver, linguist and martial artist. In his choice of self-defense methods, he favors a primary specialization in Shotokan karate, like the author. Additionally, Quiller has knowledge of Chin Na -- a related, complementary art focused on advanced joint manipulation. He does not carry a firearm "in peacetime." Indeed, this may mean that he has not carried one since World War II. reasoning that if he were caught, he would be able to explain anything he was carrying "except" a gun. He also believes that guns give their carriers a dangerously false sense of security, and he dislikes the bang they make. His resistance to interrogation is exceptional and he has managed to keep the "suffix-nine" designation that indicates that he is "reliable under torture".

Quiller's narration of the tradecraft skills he routinely employs is one of the defining elements of the novels.

His creator summed up Quiller as follows [Elleston Trevor, quoted in Otto Penzler, "The Great Detectives", 1978] :

About his past there are various rumors: that he was someone in the professional category of lawyer or doctor, denied his license; that he once served a prison term, undeservedly (hence his bitterness, which is never far below the skin); that he is a man on the run who has found a perfect cover in the Bureau. In his forties, he is as fit as an alley cat and his whole makeup is tense, edgy and bitten-eared. Without the imagination to see that life is wide open to any man's need for self-expression, Quiller seems to have to synthesize drama for himself, to invite danger and privation and bitter challenge so that his life can have significance. He needs to live close to the crunch. Like bullfighters and racing drivers, he is a professional neurotic, half in love with death. Obviously antisocial, shy of people and human contact, he is wary of giving anything of himself to others. But, on rare occasions when the pressures of a mission have forced him into a position where he must consider other people — sometimes a deadly opponent — he reveals compassion, surprising himself. His last will and testament is revealing: "Nothing of value, no dependents, next of kin unknown."

The novels

* "The Berlin Memorandum" aka "The Quiller Memorandum" (1965)

In this book, Quiller is introduced as a veteran of some unidentified World War II British clandestine service, possibly a component of the Special Operations Executive, who is consumed by guilt because he was unable to do more to stop the Final Solution. During and after his wartime service, Quiller became a specialist in Nazi clandestine activities, and in the understanding of the so-called "ratlines" used by Nazis to escape from justice. Quiller has since become an agent for the Bureau, and they have been employing him to secretly provide large amounts of useful intelligence information to West Germany's main war crimes investigation agency, the Z Commission. Quiller is tired and wants to return home, but instead the Bureau persuades him to investigate the plans of a dangerous Nazi secret society. He agrees to do so in part because that secret society has just assassinated a friend and colleague whom he had deeply respected, and who may also have been a mentor figure.

* "The 9th Directive" (1966)
* "The Striker Portfolio" (1968)
* "The Warsaw Document" (1971)
* "The Tango Briefing" (1973)
* "The Mandarin Cypher" (1975)
* "The Kobra Manifesto" (1976)
* "The Sinkiang Executive" (1978)
* "The Scorpion Signal" (1979)
* "The Peking Target" (1981)
* "Quiller/Northlight" (1985)
* "Quiller's Run" (1988)
* "Quiller KGB" (1989)
* "Quiller Barracuda" (1990)
* "Quiller Bamboo" (1991)
* "Quiller Solitaire" (1992)
* "Quiller Meridian" (1993)
* "Quiller Salamander" (1994)
* "Quiller Balalaika" (1996)

hort story

* "Last Rites" ("Espionage Magazine", April 1986)

Adaptations

* "The Quiller Memorandum" (1966) - The first book in the series adapted under its US title and starring George Segal and Alec Guinness.
* "Quiller" (1975) - British Television series featuring Michael Jayston.

References

External links

*imdb title|id=0060880|title=The Quiller Memorandum
*imdb title|id=0163484|title=Quiller
* [http://www.quiller.net/ Quiller website]


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • quiller — v. tr. Percher, déposer en hauteur. || v. Pron. Le chat s est quillé dans l arbre pour épier les oiseaux. ⇒QUILLER, verbe Rare A. Empl. intrans., vx. ,,Lancer une quille le plus près possible de la boule, pour savoir qui jouera le premier (DG). B …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • quiller — Quiller. v. n. qui se dit quand ceux qui veulent joüer aux quilles, en jettent chacun une, & tirent à qui sera le plus prés de la boule, pour sçavoir ceux qui seront ensemble. Il faut quiller, les plus prés seront ensemble …   Dictionnaire de l'Académie française

  • QUILLER — v. n. Il se dit Lorsque, avant de faire une partie de quilles, chaque joueur en jette une, et vise à la placer le plus près de la boule, pour savoir ceux qui seront ensemble, ou celui qui jouera le premier. Il faut quiller, les plus près seront… …   Dictionnaire de l'Academie Francaise, 7eme edition (1835)

  • QUILLER — v. intr. T. de Jeu Il se dit lorsque, avant de faire une partie de quilles, chaque joueur en jette une et vise à la placer le plus près possible de la boule, pour savoir ceux qui seront ensemble ou celui qui jouera le premier. Il faut quiller,… …   Dictionnaire de l'Academie Francaise, 8eme edition (1935)

  • quiller — ˈkwilə(r) noun ( s) Etymology: quill (I) + er 1. : a machine used in transferring yarn from spools and cones to quills 2. : the operator of a quiller …   Useful english dictionary

  • Quiller-Couch — [kwil′ər ko͞och′] Sir Arthur Thomas (pseud. Q) 1863 1944; Eng. writer …   English World dictionary

  • Quiller-Couch — Sir Arthur Thomas Quiller Couch (* 21. November 1863 in Bodmin, Cornwall; † 12. Mai 1944 in Fowey) war ein britischer Schriftsteller und Kritiker. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Leben 2 Werke 2.1 Romane und Erzählungen 2.2 …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Quiller-Couch, Sir Arthur Thomas — (1863 1944)    Cornish poet who was a renowned novelist, literary critic, anthologist and writer of short stories for children and adults. He was born at Bodmin, the son of a physician, and graduated literae humaniores from Trinity College,… …   British and Irish poets

  • Quiller-Couch, Sir Arthur (Thomas) — (21 nov. 1863, Bodmin, Cornwall, Inglaterra–12 may. 1944, Fowey, Cornwall). Poeta, novelista y antologador inglés. Tras educarse en Oxford, trabajó como periodista y editor en Londres antes de establecerse en su Cornwall nativa. Enseñó en… …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • quiller — /kwil euhr/, n. 1. a machine for quilling yarn. 2. a person who operates such a machine. [1850 55; QUILL + ER1] * * * …   Universalium

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