Charles McCarry, CIA officer who became a pre-eminent spy novelist, dies at 88

Charles McCarry spent almost 10 years in the CIA as an undercover officer, operating alone as he roamed throughout Africa, Europe and Asia in the 1950s and 1960s. He never carried a gun. He didn’t kill anyone.

He was in the agency when the Berlin Wall went up in 1961. He was in and out of Vietnam. He was at an airport in Congo in 1963, when a Belgian priest told him about the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. He always went by an assumed name and never lived in the same countries in which he worked.

After he resigned from the CIA to become a writer, McCarry used many of those elements in the novel that many consider his masterpiece, “The Tears of Autumn.” But when he turned in his manuscript, it was initially rejected by his publisher.

“Where’s the car chase? Where’s the torture scene? Where’s the sex? Where’s the good Russian?” the publisher demanded, as McCarry recalled in a 1988 essay for The Washington Post. “Do you call this a thriller?”

“McCarry was under such deep cover,” former CIA director Richard Helms told The Post in 1977, “I’d never even met him until years after he’d resigned from the agency.”

McCarry then worked on contract for the Saturday Evening Post and wrote for other magazines. His first book, “Citizen Nader,” a somewhat skeptical biography of consumer advocate Ralph Nader, appeared in 1972.

He published his debut novel, “The Miernik Dossier,” in 1973, followed a year later by “The Tears of Autumn,” in which the plot turned on the notion that Kennedy’s assassination was in retaliation for U.S.-sanctioned killings of South Vietnamese leaders.

In addition to his novels, McCarry published several nonfiction books on travel and one of the first transatlantic balloon flights. He also helped Alexander Haig, a onetime White House chief of staff and secretary of state, write two autobiographical volumes. When Donald Regan, chief of staff and treasury secretary under President Ronald Reagan, received a $1 million advance for his memoir in 1988, it was reportedly because he had McCarry as a ghost writer.

McCarry settled in Washington in the 1980s and, for several years, was an editor-at-large for National Geographic, working with the magazine’s most high-profile writers. He maintained homes for many years in Massachusetts and Florida.

Survivors include his wife of 65 years, the former Nancy Neill of Arlington, Virginia; four sons, William McCarry of Longmeadow, Massachusetts, Nathan McCarry of Amissville, Virginia, Caleb McCarry of Leesburg, Virginia, and John McCarry of Karachi, Pakistan; five grandchildren; and three great-grandsons.

In 2004, McCarry brought Christopher, his best-known character, out of retirement in “Old Boys,” which critics praised as a triumphant return to form. His earlier books were returned to print, and he continued to bring out new novels as recently as 2015, with “The Mulberry Bush.”

The world, in all its disorder, provided no end of subject matter for McCarry, who was at work on a new book at the time of his death. “Spies are everywhere among us and always have been,” he said. “It is a very old, old profession.”