Welcome to the LitCharts study guide on Graham Greene's The Quiet American. Created by the original team behind SparkNotes, LitCharts are the world's best literature guides.
The Quiet American: Introduction
The Quiet American: Plot Summary
The Quiet American: Detailed Summary & Analysis
The Quiet American: Themes
The Quiet American: Quotes
The Quiet American: Characters
The Quiet American: Symbols
The Quiet American: Theme Wheel
Brief Biography of Graham Greene
Historical Context of The Quiet American
Other Books Related to The Quiet American
- Full Title:The Quiet American
- Where Written:French Indochina and the United Kingdom
- When Published:December 1955
- Literary Period:Cold War spy novels
- Genre: Spy novel, thriller, war novel
- Setting:Vietnam, mid-1950s
- Climax:The death of Alden Pyle (an event that’s never directly described in the novel)
- Antagonist:General Thé / York Harding
- Point of View:First person
Extra Credit for The Quiet American
Greene and the movies: Although Graham Greene was a great novelist, many of his readers don’t realize that he was an equally accomplished screenwriter. To date, more than 60 of Greene’s works have been adapted for the screen (The Quiet American alone has been adapted twice!), many of them featuring screenplays written by Greene himself. Green was nominated for an Academy Award for his screenplay for the 1948 film The Fallen Idol, adapted from his short story, The Basement Room. Greene’s greatest cinematic achievement is arguably his screenplay for The Third Man (1949), Carol Reed’s classic film noir. The film won the top prize at the Cannes Film Festival and is often listed as one of the greatest films ever made.
Second comes right after first: During his lifetime, Greene was one of the most popular authors on the planet. His writing style—short, declarative sentences, drenched in irony and world-weariness—became so well-known that in 1949, the British magazine the New Statesman held a Graham Greene contest, in which contestants were asked to submit brief parodies of Greene’s writing style. Greene himself submitted a parody of his own style under the pseudonym N. Wilkinson. For his efforts, he was awarded second place.