The Spy in the Archive
How One Man Tried to Kill the KGB
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4.3 • 15 Ratings
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- $19.99
Publisher Description
The story of how one man—a librarian for the KGB—became a traitor to the intelligence agency, stealing the most prized Soviet-era archives and smuggling them to the West.
How do you steal a library? Not just any library but the most secret, heavily guarded archive in the world. The answer is to be a librarian. To be so quiet, that no-one knows what you are up to as you toil undercover and deep amongst the files. The work goes on for decades but remains so low key, that even after your escape, aided by MI6, no one even notices you are gone.
The Spy in the Archive tells the remarkable story of how Vasili Mitrokhin—an introverted archivist who loved nothing more than dusty archives—ended up changing the world. As the in-house archivist for the KGB, the secrets he was exposed to inside its walls turned him first into a dissident and then a spy; a traitor to his country but a man determined to expose the truth about the dark forces that had subverted Russia, forces still at work in the country today.
Historian and journalist Gordon Corera tells of the operation to extract this prized asset from Russia for the first time. It is an edge-of-the-seat thriller, with vivid flashbacks to Mitrokhin’s earlier time as a KGB idealist prepared to do what it took to serve the Soviet Union and his growing realisation that the communist state was imprisoning its own people. It is the story of what it was like to live in the Soviet Union, to raise a family there, and then of one man’s journey from the heart of the Soviet state to disillusion, betrayal, and defection.
At its heart is Mitrokhin’s determination to take on the most powerful institution in the world by revealing its darkest secrets. This is narrative nonfiction at its absolute best.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
A failed Soviet spy, consigned to processing files in a KGB archive, becomes disillusioned with the brutality of his own government and defects to the West in this arresting biography from journalist Corera (The Art of Betrayal). As a young man, Vasili Mitrokhin (1922–2004) joined the KGB filled with patriotic fervor. Yet after a career setback—he fumbled the handling of tensions surrounding a political uprising in Hungary during the 1956 Australian Olympics, where Soviet and Hungarian water polo players ended up brawling—he was consigned to the organization's archives. There he came to regard the work of the KGB (and its precursor, the Cheka) as "pure filth." He began an elaborate system of transcribing and encoding what he read and recreating it at home. Mitrokhin's story is paralleled by that of the British and U.S. embassies and counterintelligence agencies' reaction to the appearance of "a grubby, lean old man, unshaven and poorly dressed," claiming to have vital information—including the names of KGB spies in their respective countries. Corera fascinatingly spotlights how the files, handed over in 1992, reveal important historical details about the early years of the Soviet Union, and he intriguingly tracks how Vladimir Putin's KGB career unfolded alongside, but in a very different direction from, Mirokhin's. Novelistic and deeply researched, this propulsive account is a must for readers with a taste for espionage.
Customer Reviews
Opinion and Facts
Long on opinion, short on facts. Unsatisfying.