My Silent War: The Autobiography of a Spy by Kim Philby, Graham Greene (Foreword by), Phillip Knightley (Introduction)

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(Paperback - Modern Library)

  • Pub. Date: September 2002
  • 256pp
  • Sales Rank: 286,464
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: September 2002
    • Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
    • Format: Paperback, 256pp
    • Sales Rank: 286,464

    Synopsis

    In the annals of espionage, one name towers above all others: that of H.A.R. “Kim” Philby, the ringleader of the legendary Cambridge spies. A member of the British establishment, Philby joined the Secret Intelligence Service in 1940, rose to the head of Soviet counterintelligence, and, as MI6’s liaison with the CIA and the FBI, betrayed every secret of Allied operations to the Russians, fatally compromising covert actions to roll back the Iron Curtain in the early years of the Cold War.

    Written from Moscow in 1967, My Silent War shook the world and introduced a new archetype in fiction: the unrepentant spy. It inspired John le Carré’s Smiley novels and the later espionage novels of Graham Greene. Kim Philby was history’s most successful spy. He was also an exceptional writer who gave us the great iconic story of the Cold War and revolutionized, in the process, the art of espionage writing.

    Publishers Weekly

    Treachery is the subject of My Silent War: The Autobiography of a Spy, the 1968 memoir of Kim Philby, the double agent who headed the Cambridge Five spy ring that fed British and American WWII and Cold War intelligence to the Soviet Union. Philby became a communist and Soviet agent in the 1930s, then easily joined MI6 and rose to be head of British Counterintelligence before seeking asylum in Moscow in 1963 (where he lived until his death in 1988). Back in print after 12 years, Philby's riveting, psychologically acute tale of spycraft offers a rather unflattering picture of the British secret service, and also addresses why he remained committed to communism even after revelations of Stalin's crimes.

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    Biography

    Phillip Knightley is a journalist and the author of Master Spy: The Story of Kim Philby.

    Graham Greene was a member of the SIS and one of the most highly regarded English novelists of the twentieth century. Among his many works are The Power and the Glory, The Human Factor, Our Man in Havana, and The Third Man.

    Customer Reviews

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    • Ratings: 2Reviews: 1

    My Silent War: The Autobiography of a Spyby Anonymous

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    August 01, 2003: The book is interesting. I was dissapointed because I wanted to read a novel about a spy, a spy's life, methods, fears, history... This book is none of these. It is much more a recounting of office-politics, and Philby's rise through British Intelligence (with some huge gaps). There are very few details about Philby's life, what he was thinking, feeling, his fears, or his escape. On the upside, there is some interesting name-dropping, and he isn't politically correct in saying how he feels about certain well known (intelligence/political) people.