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Studies in Intelligence 68, No. 1 (Extracts, March 2024)

Reviews - Intelligence Officer's Bookshelf, March 2024

Compiled and reviewed by Hayden Peake and others

Books reviewed in this issue

General

National Security Intelligence and Ethics, edited by Seumas Miller, Mitt Regan, and Patrick F. Walsh

Nothing Is Beyond Our Reach: America’s Techno-Spy Empire, by Kristie Macrakis

A Short Introduction to Geospatial Intelligence, by John (Jack) O’Connor

Memoir

Nothing If Not Eventful: A Memoir of a Life in CIA, by Thomas L. Ahern, Jr.

History

The FBI and the Mexican Revolutionists 1908–1914, by Heribert von Feilitzsch and Charles H. Harris III

Lockheed Blackbird: Beyond the Secret Missions—The Missing Chapters, by Paul F. Crickmore

Spy For No Country: The Story of Ted Hall the Teenage Atomic Spy Who May Have Saved the World, by Dave Lindorff

SPYING: From the Fall of Jericho to the Fall of the Wall: An Intelligence Primer Based on the Lecture Notes of Professor Arthur S. Hulnick, edited by John D. Woodward, Jr.

Intelligence Abroad

From Red Terror to Terrorist State: Russia’s Intelligence Services and Their Fight for World Domination from Felix Dzerzhinsky to Vladimir Putin 1917–201?, by Yuri Felshtinsky & Vladimir Popov

Targeted as a Spy: The Surveillance of an American Diplomat in Communist Romania, by Ernest H. Latham, Jr. (Reviewed by Graham Alexander and Hayden Peake)

Fiction

Moscow X: A Novel by David McCloskey (Reviewed by Graham Alexander)

The Peacock and the Sparrow, by I. S. Berry (Reviewed by John Ehrman)

Download PDF of all reviews. (11 pages)