The Writer and the Traitor
On sale
9th April 2026
Price: £22
‘[An] elegant and forensic double portrait setting Greene, that sociologist of sin, alongside the Kremlin’s golden boy Philby, with the lengthening shadow of the cold war falling between them … both his subjects make for terrific copy … Part of the pleasure of Verkaik’s book is the vicarious glide through their parallel rake’s progresses.’ – Pratinav Anil, Guardian
‘A wholly fascinating account of an extraordinary friendship. Robert Verkaik’s nuanced and insightful portraits of these two highly complicated individuals are brilliantly convincing.’ – William Boyd
‘A superb spy book. This masterpiece of forensic research asks troubling new questions about two of Britain’s most mysterious and famously complex figures.’ – Richard J Aldrich, author of GCHQ
In The Writer and the Traitor, bestselling historian Robert Verkaik sheds a completely fresh light on the enigmatic relationship between two giants of the twentieth century: Graham Greene, the internationally lauded novelist, and Kim Philby, the intelligence-officer-turned-traitor.
The two men met as MI6 officers in London, joining forces in a deadly secret war to defeat the Nazis. But Greene unexpectedly resigned just days before British intelligence’s greatest triumph – D-Day – and he used his experience in the intelligence services as a backdrop for his novels Our Man in Havana and The Human Factor and the screenplay of The Third Man. Lurking within the pages lay suspicions of his friend and former colleague, with characters and plots echoing Philby’s life. Was Philby the real Third Man? Did Greene’s work contain coded messages and warnings of betrayal to M16? Where did Greene’s ultimate loyalties lie and who was he really working for?
In this highly revealing book, based on astonishing new archive material, Verkaik takes readers on a mesmerising journey from pre-war Vienna to Cold War Moscow, via wartime Sierra Leone and London in the Blitz. This is more than just a riveting tale of espionage; it is the story of a mysterious friendship that survived against the odds. Ultimately The Writer and the Traitor explores the perplexing question that nobody yet has answered: why did one of Britain’s most famous writers remain loyal to Britain’s most hated traitor?
‘A wholly fascinating account of an extraordinary friendship. Robert Verkaik’s nuanced and insightful portraits of these two highly complicated individuals are brilliantly convincing.’ – William Boyd
‘A superb spy book. This masterpiece of forensic research asks troubling new questions about two of Britain’s most mysterious and famously complex figures.’ – Richard J Aldrich, author of GCHQ
In The Writer and the Traitor, bestselling historian Robert Verkaik sheds a completely fresh light on the enigmatic relationship between two giants of the twentieth century: Graham Greene, the internationally lauded novelist, and Kim Philby, the intelligence-officer-turned-traitor.
The two men met as MI6 officers in London, joining forces in a deadly secret war to defeat the Nazis. But Greene unexpectedly resigned just days before British intelligence’s greatest triumph – D-Day – and he used his experience in the intelligence services as a backdrop for his novels Our Man in Havana and The Human Factor and the screenplay of The Third Man. Lurking within the pages lay suspicions of his friend and former colleague, with characters and plots echoing Philby’s life. Was Philby the real Third Man? Did Greene’s work contain coded messages and warnings of betrayal to M16? Where did Greene’s ultimate loyalties lie and who was he really working for?
In this highly revealing book, based on astonishing new archive material, Verkaik takes readers on a mesmerising journey from pre-war Vienna to Cold War Moscow, via wartime Sierra Leone and London in the Blitz. This is more than just a riveting tale of espionage; it is the story of a mysterious friendship that survived against the odds. Ultimately The Writer and the Traitor explores the perplexing question that nobody yet has answered: why did one of Britain’s most famous writers remain loyal to Britain’s most hated traitor?
Reviews
[An] elegant and forensic double portrait setting Greene, that sociologist of sin, alongside the Kremlin's golden boy Philby, with the lengthening shadow of the cold war falling between them ... both his subjects make for terrific copy ... Part of the pleasure of Verkaik's book is the vicarious glide through their parallel rake's progresses
A superb spy book. This masterpiece of forensic research asks troubling new questions about two of Britain's most mysterious and famously complex figures
A wholly fascinating account of an extraordinary friendship. Robert Verkaik's nuanced and insightful portraits of these two highly complicated individuals are brilliantly convincing
Ever since first reading Graham Greene's extraordinary foreword to my grandfather's autobiography, My Silent War, I have been intrigued by the relationship between one of Britain's most loved writers, and the real Third Man. In his vivid and rigorously researched new book, Robert Verkaik shines new light on one of the most fascinating friendships of the Cold War - proving that fact is stranger than fiction, and just as compelling
Robert Verkaik's latest work is a highly gripping, beautifully crafted page-turner that combines the narrative flair of a bestselling thriller with the forensic precision of investigative journalism. The Writer and the Traitor draws the reader into a world of tension, pace, and intrigue, vividly animating the flaws, cunning, and irrepressible quirks of two of Britain's most compelling spies
The novelist's eye of Kim Philby's friend and MI6 colleague Graham Greene provides a new perspective on the treachery of Philby and the Cambridge spies ... a richly entertaining tale