The Young Kim Philby ? Soviet Spy and British Intelligence Officer - Harrison, Edward; - Prospero Internet Bookshop

The Young Kim Philby ? Soviet Spy and British Intelligence Officer: Soviet Spy and British Intelligence Officer
 
Product details:

ISBN13:9780859898676
ISBN10:0859898679
Binding:Hardback
No. of pages:256 pages
Size:156x234x15 mm
Weight:666 g
Language:English
684
Category:

The Young Kim Philby ? Soviet Spy and British Intelligence Officer

Soviet Spy and British Intelligence Officer
 
Publisher: Liverpool University Press
Date of Publication:
 
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GBP 109.50
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55 992 HUF (53 326 HUF + 5% VAT)
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Short description:

Biography of Soviet agent Kim Philby, the ?Third Man? in the Cambridge spy ring at the heart of Britain?s secret cold war.

Long description:
Kim Philby is perhaps the most notorious traitor in British History and the archetypal spy: ingenious, charming and deceitful. The reluctance of the British and Russian governments to reveal full details of his career meant that for many years a shortage of evidence fuelled controversy. Was Philby an ideological spy, working for the Soviet Union out of Communist conviction, or was he prompted by a personality defect to choose a life of treachery? Was Philby the perfect agent, the ?KGB masterspy?, or just plain lucky? In this new biography, Edward Harrison re-examines the crucial early years of Philby?s work as a Soviet agent and British intelligence officer using documents from the United Kingdom National Archives, and private papers. He shows how Philby established an early pattern of deceit and betrayed his father St John Philby. But the book also demonstrates how in all the major decisions Philby slavishly sought to emulate his father. This contradicts the myth of independence Philby sought to propagate in 'My Silent War' (his memoirs), along with other deceptions. Later chapters offer the first detailed study of Philby?s work as a counter-espionage officer during the Second World War, examining his rapid promotion and providing a substantial explanation of why he was appointed head of the anti-Soviet section of the British Secret Intelligence Service. Harrison also explains that Philby was never wholly trusted by the Soviet secret service.

Edward Harrison?s study of Kim Philby?s early career as a Soviet spy is original and, by turns, unsettling, revealing and tragic. It is also much more than a biography of what, in French parlance, would be called the emotional and intellectual formation of a traitor.

Martin Thomas