Send us Fan Mail
THE MINISTRY OF FEAR by Graham Greene is a thrilling blend of espionage and psychological mystery set in wartime London. The story follows Arthur Rowe, an ordinary man caught up in Nazi intrigue. Celebrated for its moral complexity, it redefined the boundaries of the mystery genre.
Get your copy of all of our History of Mystery book selections here! (including even some 2027 selections)
History of Mystery book slections now in our Bookshop Storefront as well! Support your local bookseller.
Watch clips from our conversations with guests!
For bonus episodes and to get all episodes first, join our Patreon community.
The title reflects the pervasive atmosphere of dread and paranoia in wartime Britain, where fear itself becomes a tool of control. The ministry of fear represents an institution or force that spreads fear to undermine trust and stability, both on a personal and societal level.
Is The Ministry of Fear a Spy Thriller? An Entertainment? A Study of What It Is to Be Human?
Once the police are involved, the “murky trail leads to a Thirty-Nine Steps type of organization and a microfilm” that must be found. (Tom Ruffles, The Joy of Mere Words)
It’s a page-turning thriller combined with psychological nuance, interesting characters, believable settings, and an exploration of what it means to be human. The Ministry of Fear was billed as an “entertainment” — much-needed escapism from wartime life. The “somewhat preposterous spy thriller [is] a dark analysis of personal responsibility, loss, and the obligations that go with love. (Tom Ruffles, The Joy of Mere Words)
Greeneland: the seedy, dangerous, and politically charged world of Greene’s novels. Greene believed the real world could often be more horrific than fiction. The term describes a milieu charged with existential or religious questions and implications.
References to The Little Duke – Richard the Fearless (1854) in The Ministry of Fear
Set in 943, the children’s adventure story by Charlotte Yonge concerns the young Duke of Normandy who must avenge his father’s death while keeping the King of France from absorbing his independent dukedom. The war that breaks out draws in the Danes and the young Duke’s Danish bodyguard. The young Duke eventually learns forgiveness towards his enemies, the French king’s sons.
Why is Rowe drawn to The Little Duke? How do explorers, heroes, and high ideals fit into the real world, where morality isn’t always clear?
Graham Greene Sets The Ministry of Fear During Wartime England
“A bomb early in the blitz had fallen in the middle of the street and blasted both sides, but Rowe stayed on. Houses went overnight, but [Arthur Rowe] stayed.”
“Far away on the outskirts of London the sirens began their nightly wail … Somewhere two miles above their heads an enemy bomber came up from the estuary.”
The sirens sounded the All Clear. “Nobody moved to go home: this was their home now. They were quite accustomed to sleeping underground …. This was the world they knew.”
Support the show
https://www.instagram.com/teatonicandtoxin/
https://www.facebook.com/teatonicandtoxin
https://www.teatonicandtoxin.com
Stay mysterious...