William Haggard
William Haggard was the pseudonym of Richard Henry Michael Clayton, the son of the Rev. Henry James Clayton and Mabel Sarah Clayton. He was an English writer of fictional spy thrillers set in the 1960s through the 1980s, or, as the writer H. R. F. Keating called them, "action novels of international power." Like C. P. Snow, he was a quintessentially British Establishment figure who had been a civil servant in India, and his books vigorously put forth his perhaps idiosyncratic points of view. The principal character in most of his novels is the urbane Colonel Charles Russell of the fictional Security Executive,, who moves easily and gracefully along Snow's Corridors of Power in Whitehall. During the years of the fictional spy mania initially begun by the James Bond stories, Haggard was considered by most critics to be at the very top of the field.
Wikipedia📖 Books
The vendettists
author
1990
The diplomatist
author
1987
Meritocrats
author
1985
The need to know
author
1984
Mischief Makers (Walker British Mystery)
author
1982
Money Man
author
1981
The median line
author
1979
The poison people
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1978
The scorpion's tail
author
1975
The old masters
author
1973
The hardliners
author
1970
A cool day for killing
author
1968
The conspirators
author
1967
The power house
author
1966
The Telemann touch
author
1958
The protectors
author
1940
Yesterday's enemy
author
1940
The Kinsmen (Walker British Mystery)
author
1940