Spies and Other Gods by James Wolff
Monday, April 6, 2026 at 5:43PM 
Published by Atlantic Crime on April 14, 2026
Spies and Other Gods is already dated. An Iranian living in Paris tells his friend that tourism in Iran “is definitely increasing.” Not so much now.
This is a different kind of spy novel. The protagonist, Aphra McQueen, isn’t the kind of spy typically showcased in espionage fiction. She is a professor specializing in medieval history. For reasons not immediately shared with the reader, she takes a job as a researcher for Parliament’s Intelligence and Security Committee, the entity charged with oversight of the Secret Intelligence Service (MI6).
The committee recently installed a complaint system that allows whistleblowers to report concerns about MI6. Aphra is tasked with investigating the first confidential complaint.
Sir William Rentoul is the Head of the Service. He has no use for oversight. His goal is to identify the whistleblower while obstructing Aphra’s investigation. To that end, he assigns Susan, a building escort who keeps visitors from straying into secure areas, to safeguard the files that Susan wants to review.
The file begins with a police report from 2017 that concerns the murder of an exiled Iranian journalist living in the Netherlands. His mutilated body is eventually linked to other murdered Iranians in various cities across Europe, raising the fear that an Iranian assassin has been targeting people living outside the country who are regarded as enemies of the state. The whisteblower’s complaint alleged gross negligence in MI6’s response to the assassinations.
Susan gives Aphra time to read only a few pages before spiriting her off to interviews with staff members who were involved in the botched mission. Rentoul doesn’t expect Susan to get far because “the organisation Sir William runs has decades upon decades of experience in frustrating outsiders intent on getting to the bottom of things.”
Susan learns that MI6 tracked travelers from Iran to the cities in which the assassinations occurred to search for a common pattern. Investigators identified a professor of chemistry at Tehran University (code name CASPIAN) as the potential assassin. The Service identified CASPIAN’s nephew, a 41-year-old MBA student in Paris named Ali, as a potential source of information about CASPIAN.
To avoid a diplomatic kerfuffle with France, MI6 wanted to make its pitch to Ali in the UK. To that end, undercover agents contacted a British-Syrian dentist named Zak who lived with Ali for a time during his childhood. Using a pretext, an agent persuaded Zak to put him in touch with Ali. The agent struck up a long-distance relationship with Ali, ostensibly to gather information about his MBA program, then thanked him by inviting him to attend a soccer game in Manchester, where the recruitment was made. Ali now serves as a paid source of information, not just about his uncle but about the Iranian regime. He is regarded as an intelligence source of high value.
Aphra’s investigation is cut short when Susan plants a file on her, causing Aphra’s immediate dismissal and the threat of an arrest. Aphra has a goal of her own, however, so she continues the investigation by contacting Zak and (on the pretense of being an MI6 operative) persuades Zak to travel with her to Paris so she can meet Ali.
The story follows the twists and turns of Aphra’s investigation and MI6’s attempt to thwart her. At some point, Sir William travels to France to gather information about Aphra and Zak, much to the displeasure of his underlings, who understand the diplomatic difficulty of spying in France without alerting the French authorities. Sir William appears to be in the early stages of dementia, so it isn’t surprising that he botches the job.
James Wolff follows the tradition of John LeCarre’s later novels by painting a picture of British spies (the ones in charge, at any rate) as inept bureaucrats. The story builds suspense as Aphra and Zak execute dangerous plans to find the assassin while Sir William makes bumbling efforts to obstruct them.
Spies and Other Gods isn’t a fast-moving action novel, but Wolff keeps the story moving and spices it with occasional action scenes. The plot dishes out rewarding surprises, both in Aphra’s motivation and in the assassin’s identity.
The story is told by a third-person narrator who seems to be something like the spirit of MI6, or perhaps of the building in which MI6 is housed. “When individuals come together, particularly under the umbrella of an organisation with a distinctive purpose and history, something new comes into being . . . This might be called an organisation’s spirit, or soul, or ethos, or character, or simply its identity.” Perhaps the narrator is a god (“Wherever two or three are gathered in my name, or whatever the line is, that’s where you’ll find me,” he says near the story’s end). Whatever the narrator might be, Wolff’s narrative approach adds another layer of interest to the story.
Wolff is a former British intelligence officer. British intelligence has produced some of the smartest spy novelists. Spies and Other Gods is my first encounter with a Wolff novel. I look forward to reading more.
RECOMMENDED



