Maverick Spy: Stalin's Super-Agent in World War II
By (Author) Hamish MacGibbon
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
28th January 2021
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
European history
Espionage and secret services
Far-left political ideologies and movements
Military intelligence
Second World War
Modern warfare
War and defence operations
940.5487470922
Paperback
240
Width 148mm, Height 230mm, Spine 12mm
400g
Hamish MacGibbon examines his family history after learning that his father was a spy for the Soviet Union during WWII. In this book, James MacGibbons son Hamish tells the story of his parents, their interaction with the communist party and their flirtation with wartime espionage in post-war Britain. It is a unique portrait of two very ordinary people caught up in the extraordinary events of World War Two and the Cold War, brought to life by engaging prose and original MI5 records. The MI5 had long suspected James of espionage and interrogated him at the wars end. Without a confession, there was little the British secret intelligence services could do except place James and his family under close surveillance, the proof of which his children discovered shortly after his death. Hamish MacGibbon draws on a wealth of documents gleamed from official government archives, which shows how mail was regularly intercepted and private telephone calls recorded. The result is a fascinating exploration of how the war, espionage and a seemingly regular family depict the ordinary and the extraordinary interweaving.
Hamish MacGibbon was Director of the Publishing House James and James. He is the son of James and Jean MacGibbon.