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OverviewReal stories of espionage from around the globe Spies: The Secret Agents Who Changed the Course of History details the stories behind some of the world's most legendary secret agents. From the real-life Manchurian Candidate and the ""original"" James Bond, to the man who stole the secret of the atomic bomb, this book presents breathtaking stories of espionage around the world. Not all spies are intelligence agents, and these tales include the defectors, moles, and other amateurs who took extraordinary risks for a variety of reasons. Stripped of code names and revealed to the world, these stories bring the reality of espionage to life. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Ernest VolkmanPublisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc Imprint: John Wiley & Sons Inc Edition: UK Edition Dimensions: Width: 15.00cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 22.60cm Weight: 0.612kg ISBN: 9780471025061ISBN 10: 0471025062 Pages: 304 Publication Date: 15 February 1994 Audience: Professional and scholarly , General/trade , Professional & Vocational , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Out of Print Availability: Out of stock Table of ContentsTHE MOLES: H.A.R. Philby; Anthony Blunt; George Blake; Vladimir I Vetrov; DEFECTORS: Afansy Shorikhov; Igor Gouzenko; Whittaker Chambers; THE LEGENDS: Leida Domb; Wilhelm Wassmuss; Ian Fleming; Dusko Popov; Margareta Zelle; THE TRAITORS: Larry Wu-Tai Chin; Klaus Fuchs; Alfred Redl; THE SPYMASTERS: K'ang Sheng; Markus Wolf; THE INFAMIES: Laventri Beria; Reinhard Heydrich; Gabor Peter; SOME MYSTERIES: Rudolf Roessler; Vitali Yurchenko; AND A FEW CURIOSITIES: Graham Greene; Somerset Maugham.ReviewsOnce-over-lightly profiles of more than two score spies, code-breakers, defectors, moles, and saboteurs who've engaged in the intelligence trade during the 20th century. While the list of men and women in the author's gallery of rogues is somewhat arbitrary, it affords a representative sampling of those whose covert activities directly affected the fate of empires, nations, or history itself. For example, Volkman (Secret Intelligence, 1989; The Heist, 1986, etc.) offers brief, authoritative dossiers on such storied figures as Anthony Blunt, Whittaker Chambers, Eric Erickson (the so-called counterfeit traitor), Klans Fuchs, Igor Gouzenko, Oleg Penkovsky, H.A.R. (Kim) Philby, Richard Sorge, Herbert Yardley, and Margareta Zelle (better known as Mata Hari). He also reviews the exploits of less familiar operatives, including George Blake (the original Manchurian candidate), Eliyahu Cohen (Israel's short-lived man in Damascus), Leiba Domb (conductor of WW II's Red Orchestra), Rudolf Roessler (aka Luey, for his Lucerne base), and Wilhelm Wassmuss (the German Lawrence). Covered as well are the coldblooded organization-men who ran whole services or significant networks - the likes of Lavreati Beria (KGB), Claude Dansey (MI6's Z Ring), Reinhard Heydrich (SD), Gabor Peter (the Stalinist head of Hungry's secret police), K'ang Sheng (Mao's security chief), Gestapo boss Heinrich Mueller (who may have gone over to the Soviets just before V-E Day), intrepid William Stephenson (Winston Churchill's favorite spook), and the shadowy Markus Wolf (East Germany's HVA). Last but not least, the author focuses on literary lights who did undercover work at some point in their careers - Ian Fleming, Graham Greene, Ernest Hemingway, Somerset Maugham. Cloak-and-dagger buffs may quarrel about their favorite omissions, but Volkman's short-take files afford general readers an consistently absorbing and informative introduction to key players in the espionage game. (Kirkus Reviews) Author InformationErnest Volkman is an American author, investigative reporter, and journalist who writes about war, espionage, and the criminal underworld. Volkman, a 1959 graduate of Whitman High School in his home town of Huntington, attended Hofstra University and graduated with a B.A. degree in Journalism in 1963. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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