Talk:Colonel Charles Russell: Difference between revisions

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imported>Hayford Peirce
imported>Hayford Peirce
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He is an "Anglo-Irishman", page 71, with "a decoration he had won in battle", page 72
He is an "Anglo-Irishman", page 71, with "a decoration he had won in battle", page 72


Now he's "rising sixty" again, page
Now he's "rising sixty" again, page 151

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 Definition Head of the fictional Security Executive, a British government agency that figures in 25 or more novels by William Haggard, not all of them featuring Russell. [d] [e]
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 Workgroup category Literature [Editors asked to check categories]
 Talk Archive none  English language variant American English

info from the books as I read them

In book 21, The Mischief Makers, no longer smokes, still drinks, and still has a mustache; hopes Willy Smith will take over the Executive

In book 2, Venetian Blind lots of stuff:

Russell has said he will retire in six months. No one in his department really qualified to succeed him. the Home Secretary (who IS a Minister), Gabriel Palliser, says that Russell "was something special. He had it both ways: he ran the machine, and ran it beautifully -- the files, the dossiers, the interminable cross-checking. All that is essential, it's nine-tenths of the job, and it wouldn't be difficult to find a man to carry it. But it's the other tenth, nowadays, that counts in the pinches, and for that Russell had a flair. A nose. He smelt things...Colonel Russell is... something exceptional. He has a nose for the suspect but he detests suspicion; he's a humanist, a liberal in the oldest, best sense... you can't trust many when it comes to that sort of power." pages 12-13

Russell's room: untidyness; Benares brass and silver trophies; excellent Persian rugs; admirably attended mustache; soldierly but slightly donnish == page 34

Still smokes a pipe (54) and cigarettes when offered (60): champagne didn't agree with him... but he seldom declined it -- page 54

Says he's "an indifferent bridge player" (61)

has sherry and biscuits for lunch when too busy to go out (63)

"He was a churchgoer by mild conviction, but not a moralist." His vicar is a High Churchman. (64)

"I'm sixty" page 123

In book 3, The Arena (novel), he belongs to Bratt's Club, page 68, which gets a mention in Slow Burner but no description

In book 4, The Unquiet Sleep, he has "bright blue eyes", page 70

He is pleased that he can "remember a little Latin" from Martial, page 71

He is an "Anglo-Irishman", page 71, with "a decoration he had won in battle", page 72

Now he's "rising sixty" again, page 151