Fri 29 Aug 2025
A 1001 Midnights Review: JOHN GARDNER – The Garden of Weapons.
Posted by Steve under 1001 Midnights , Bibliographies, Lists & Checklists , Characters , Reviews[9] Comments
by George Kelley & Bill Pronzini
JOHN GARDNER – The Garden of Weapons. Herbie Kruger #2 [See Comment #1.] Hodder & Stoughton, UK, hardcover, 1980 McGraw-Hill, US, hardcover, 1981.
John Gardner is one of the most versatile British writers in the espionage genre. He gained early recognition for his Boysie Oakes series — The Liquidators (1946), Amber Nine (1966 ), and five others — which he created in the hope they would be an “amusing counter-irritant to the excesses” of James Bond; these were written in the black-humor style characteristic of the Sixties.
In the Seventies, Gardner scored additional critical and sales triumphs with a much different type of series — one featuring Sherlock Holmes’s archenemy, Professor Moriarity, in The Return of Moriarity (1974) and The Revenge of Moriarity (1975). And in the Eighties, Gardner returned to the frantic world of Bondian spies — literally when he began a series of new 007 adventures.
But Gardner’s best book to date is not one featuring a series character; it is the realistic espionage thriller The Garden of Weapons, which begins when a KGB defector walks into the British Consulate in West Berlin and demands to speak with Big Herbie Kruger, a legendary figure in intelligence circles.
Kruger’s interrogation of the defector reveals that the greatest of Kruger’s intelligence coups — a group of six informants known as the Telegraph Boys — has been penetrated by a Soviet spy. Kruger decides to go undercover and eliminate the double agent himself, without the knowledge or consent of British Intelligence.
Posing as an American tourist, Kruger enters East Berlin to carry out his deadly self-appointed mission. But the task is hardly a simple one: and Gardner’s plot is full of Byzantine twists and turns involving the East Germans, the KGB, and British Intelligence. Any reader who enjoys espionage fiction will find The Garden of Weapons a small masterpiece of its type.
Another non-series Gardner thriller in the same vein is The Werewolf Trace (1977), which has been called “a compulsively readable thriller with delicately handled paranormal undertones and a bitter ending.”
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Reprinted with permission from 1001 Midnights, edited by Bill Pronzini & Marcia Muller and published by The Battered Silicon Dispatch Box, 2007. Copyright © 1986, 2007 by the Pronzini-Muller Family Trust.
The Herbie Kruger series —
1. The Nostradamus Traitor (1979)
2. The Garden of Weapons (1980)
3. The Quiet Dogs (1982)
4. Maestro (1993)
5. Confessor (1995)
August 29th, 2025 at 7:26 pm
In fact, there were 5 Big Herbie Kruger books, starting with The Nostradamus Traitor. T
he Garden of Weapons was the second.
August 29th, 2025 at 7:56 pm
That is something I definitely did not know, and I’m glad to know it now. Thanks, Jeff. I’ll add it to the info at the top of the review…
ADDED LATER
…as well as the list of all five books in the series at the end of the review.
August 29th, 2025 at 8:39 pm
The Werewolf Trace is really good, IMO.
August 29th, 2025 at 9:11 pm
Once again, I vaguely remember writing this review of THE GARDEN OF WEAPONS long ago. All the excellence of this review belongs to Bill Pronzini. And, I agree with David: THE WEREWOLF TRACE is really good and deserves more readers!
August 29th, 2025 at 9:47 pm
I owe both Bill Pronzini and Marcia Muller a huge amount of thanks for allowing me to keep posting these old reviews from 1001 MIDNIGHTS. I can only imagine the hassle (and headaches) there must have been in putting the book together, for what must have been very little money.
And George, I hope you enjoyed working on the book as well. You’re in good company — and a part of history!
August 30th, 2025 at 2:21 pm
Steve, I was honored to be a part of the 1001 MIDNIGHTS project. Working with Marcia Muller and Bill Pronzini was a joy! I wish there had been a 1001 MORE MIDNIGHTS to contribute to…but as you say, publishers are looking for fat profits on best selling books instead.
My local independent bookseller was shocked to learn that the new Robert Galbraith novel, THE HALLMARK MAN, will list at $40!
August 30th, 2025 at 2:51 pm
All things considered, I’ll pass on that one. (Didn’t have to think very long.)
Later: It’s only $28 on Amazon, and at 912 pages, maybe it’s worth it. Of course, a number of people dislike buying stuff from Amazon.
August 31st, 2025 at 1:21 am
The Kreuger series are probably Gardner’s best critically received spy series, though the SECRET trilogy runs a close second and is more serious.
He wrote a fairly successful series about a woman police officer after the Bond series, but they never sold very well here though critics liked them.
August 31st, 2025 at 1:22 pm
You must be thinking of the D.S.Suzie Mountford books. Another series I haven’t read even one of. (And to tell you the truth I’ve managed to read only one of Gardner’s Moriarty books, and maybe two of the Boysie Oakes adventures. This is frustrating.)