The Hairless Mexican by W. Somerset Maugham (Heathen Short)

The Hairless Mexican

Heathen Short #7
Author
W. Somerset Maugham
Translator
First Edition
1928
Heathen Edition
2025
Refreshed
Pages
64
Heathen Genera
Arriving Soon-ish, Spyerrific
ISBN
979-8-90075-007-1

The Hairless Mexican was a tall man, and though thinnish gave you the impression of being very powerful; he was smartly dressed in a blue serge suit, with a silk handkerchief neatly tucked in the breast pocket of his coat, and he wore a gold bracelet on his wrist. His features were good, but a little larger than life-size, and his eyes were brown and lustrous. He was quite hairless. His yellow skin had the smoothness of a woman’s and he had no eyebrows nor eyelashes; he wore a pale brown wig, rather long, and the locks were arranged in artistic disorder. This and the unwrinkled sallow face, combined with his dandified dress, gave him an appearance that was at first glance a trifle horrifying. He was repulsive and ridiculous, but you could not take your eyes from him. There was a sinister fascination in his strangeness.

William Somerset Maugham (1874–1965) was an English playwright and author whose clinical prose and worldly detachment shaped early modern fiction. Drawing on his own experience working for the British Secret Service, Maugham distilled the quiet dread of espionage into stories that read less like fiction and more like confession. Teeming with quiet realism and psychological depth, “The Hairless Mexican” is one such confessional. This compact tale sees British agent Ashenden paired with a professional assassin to eliminate a German courier in wartime Italy. The eponymous hitman — bald, flamboyant, and disturbingly efficient — executes his task with a detachment that unnerves even the seasoned spy. What unfolds is not a thriller but a study in cold precision, where duty trumps empathy, and the machinery of war leaves no room for sentiment. This is Maugham’s memo from the trenches of spycraft: a meditation on the wages of secrecy, a portrait of calculated violence, and a parable of precision gone sideways, where the devil is not in the details but in the dispatch.

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“Provides some highly delicious entertainment . . . the Hairless Mexican — this character is so extraordinary a creation that he is worth the price of the book.”
The Buffalo Times

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