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The Ghost (novel)

The Ghost is a 2007 political thriller by the best-selling English novelist and journalist Robert Harris. In 2010, the novel was adapted into a film, The Ghost Writer, directed by Roman Polanski and starring Ewan McGregor and Pierce Brosnan, for which Polanski and Harris co-wrote the screenplay.

For film based on the novel, see The Ghost Writer (film).

Author

English

26 September 2007

United Kingdom

Print (hardback)(First edition)

320 (1st UK)

PR6058.A69147 G48 2007c

Plot summary[edit]

Most of the action takes place on Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts, where former British Prime Minister Adam Lang has been holed up in the holiday home of his billionaire American publisher to turn out his memoirs on a deadline. Lang's former aide, Mike McAra, was struggling to ghostwrite Lang's memoirs. However, McAra drowned when he apparently fell off the Woods Hole ferry. The fictional narrator of The Ghost, whose name is never given, is hired to replace him. His girlfriend walks out on him over his willingness to take the job: "She felt personally betrayed by him; she used to be a party member". The narrator begins to suspect foul play over McAra's death.


Meanwhile, Lang is accused by his enemies of war crimes. A leaked memorandum has revealed that he secretly approved the capture and the extraordinary rendition of British citizens to Guantanamo Bay to face interrogation and torture. Richard Rycart, Lang's disillusioned and renegade former foreign secretary (loosely based on Robin Cook), who before and during his early days in office made much of his wish to adopt an "ethical" foreign policy, is now at the United Nations in a position to do his former boss serious damage. Lang thus appears in imminent threat of indictment at the International Criminal Court.


The narrator borrows a car, which was previously used by McAra. McAra's last journey is still programmed into the satnav, and the narrator follows the route to the home of Professor Paul Emmett, who attended Cambridge with Lang, but Emmett is evasive about his connection to Lang. The narrator investigates Emmett and discovers an accusation that he is a CIA agent. The narrator discovers Rycart's phone number amongst McAra's things and arranges to meet him in New York. Rycart says that he and McAra had concluded Lang was recruited by Emmett into the CIA.


Lang is blown up by a British suicide bomber. The narrator finishes writing the book. At its launch party, he sees that Lang's wife Ruth knows Professor Emmett. The narrator recalls a remark Lang had made and realizes the first word of each chapter of the manuscript encode a hidden message: "Langs wife Ruth studying in 76 was recruited as a CIA agent in America by Professor Paul Emmett of Harvard University".

Reception[edit]

The character Adam Lang is a thinly-disguised version of Tony Blair.[1][2] The fictional counterpart of Cherie Blair is depicted as a sinister manipulator of her husband. Harris told The Guardian before publication: "The day this appears a writ might come through the door. But I would doubt it, knowing him".[3]


The New York Observer commented that the book's "shock-horror revelation" is "so shocking it simply can't be true, though if it were it would certainly explain pretty much everything about the recent history of Great Britain".[4]


Harris said in a National Public Radio interview that politicians like Lang and Blair, particularly when they have been in office a long time, become divorced from everyday reality, read little and end up with a limited outlook. When it comes to writing their memoirs, that tends to make them need a ghostwriter.[5]

Daily Telegraph review

at IMDb

The Ghost Writer

Arcadia Institution Website (fictional)

at the Internet Book List

The Ghost