The Spy's Son: The True Story of the Highest-Ranking CIA Officer Ever Convicted of Espionage and the Son He Trained to Spy for Russia
A**R
Five Stars
Interesting....
T**R
america novel
wenn die geschichte stimmt, dann ist es ein wirklich übles stück egoissmus und brutalität gegenüber den eigenen kindern.
D**Y
Three Stars
Breezy, journalsitic and shocking but not much depth
S**S
Denson is at his best recounting Jim's career trajectory and the general geopolitics of ...
3.5 stars. Denson brings a snappy writing style (if sometimes bogged down by clunky metaphors) to this story of a disgraced CIA officer (found out to be feeding Russia information) and his youngest son (who he manipulated into passing further information). The book starts with son Nathaniel's final meeting with a Russian operative in Cyprus, then jobs back in time to tell the story of how his father, Harold James (Jim) Nicholson came to work for the CIA. Denson is at his best recounting Jim's career trajectory and the general geopolitics of the time. At times the telling can feel a little flat, but only because Jim was not driven by ideology but by greed, making the story not one of grand risks, but of petty ones. The chapters covering Jim's discovery, arrest, and eventual imprisonment are quite good. At the time of his father's arrest, Nathaniel was 12 and idolized him. Over the following years Jim took advantage of that hero worship and enlisted Nathaniel to get in touch with the Russians, explaining that they kept a sort of pension for their informants and that it wasn't illegal, just something to help the family. The story ends much as you might expect, with Nathaniel caught and Jim punished further. It is a bit depressing, not least the naivete of the son and the willingness of the father to risk that son's freedom for a little extra cash. Worth time for those who enjoy tales of espionage.
B**M
Well told
It's almost like two separate stories, both fascinating. I am not a spy enthusiast, but this book held my interest until the last page. The author draws his characters well and you feel you know each one well at the end. Amazing how little we really know some people until the curtain of truth is drawn back. This true story read like fiction.
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