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Špión v Římě

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The true story of Peter Tompkins, a young American smuggled into Rome by the OSS at the dangerous climax of the German occupation.

A Spy in Rome is Peter Tompkins' remarkable account of what it is like to be a spy: alone in enemy territory; a price on your head; your life in hands of total strangers; always and completely on your own, without help, without orders and without refuge.

Hardcover

First published January 1, 1962

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About the author

Peter Tompkins

23 books89 followers
Peter Tompkins was an American journalist, World War II spy, and best-selling author.
His best known and most influential books include The Secret Life of Plants, published in 1973, Secrets of the Great Pyramid, reprinted in paperback in 1997, and Mysteries of the Mexican Pyramids, published in 1976. He is the father of author Ptolemy Tompkins.

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
19 reviews
September 17, 2023
This is a fascinating account of the adventures of a young U.S. intelligence officer in Italy during the last year of WWII.

There are a number of factors that make this book special. Tomkins is an excellent writer, highly intelligent, politically savvy and mature well beyond his 25 years. With his fluency in Italian and insider knowledge of the city of Rome and local norms and customs, he is able to give us an authentic slice of life experience from the Nazi-occupied city.

Italy's political landscape at the time is diverse and complex. Tomkins shares his struggles, thought process and strategies as he is quickly able - after a rough start, to establish an information gathering network that provides the allies with vital insights on Nazi strongpoints and movements.

He is mostly fortunate in his choice of work colleagues from the italian underground. He describes a diverse range of characters from a variety of occupations from urban police, political ambassadors, vatican officials, doctors, tailors and domestic help.

On the political front Tompkins gives us a first-hand account as he rubs shoulders with fascists roaming the streets and pose a double threat with the threat of violence while some are Nazi collaborators who might turn one in to the SS.

Tompkins is left leaning politically and gives us an open and honest account of how the allies, once they took the city of Rome, eventually shunned socialists and others on the left who fought with them as part of the underground and instead favored the same people on the right that collaborated with the enemy.

With all that going on Tomkins still manages to have fun as he and his gang throw frequent parties to "maintain cover" as care free, high society youths. And at one point has a close call when he ends up partying with a high-level German officer.

There's nothing else I've seen like this book. It's genuinely one of a kind.

Profile Image for Paul Vidich.
Author 12 books360 followers
February 3, 2018
Peter Tompkins served in the Office of Strategic Services in Nazi-occupied Rome in the early months of 1944 when the American Fifth Army struggled toward the city. A Spy in Rome is a lucid, deeply exciting account his five months operating behind enemy lines. “Wild Bill” Donovan, the colorful head of the OSS, frustrated by inadequate intelligence from orthodox sources, recruited the brilliant and eccentric Tompkins, then a reporter for the New York Herald Tribune, believing in the advantage of the enthusiastic amateur. “I drove up to the Fifth Army headquarters and told the boys the general had said O.K. That’s all there was to it!” Rome comes alive in Tompkins’s telling: the damp smell of the Tiber at dawn; evenings stolen from the war when love and danger sleep in the same bed; hours of patient surveillance punctuated by the terror of a passing German patrol. A Spy in Rome is notable for its descriptions of how intelligence is collected and collated by the lone spy: German troop movements pieced together from a network of partisan road watchers and turned into intelligence on an old battered typewriter. Tompkins’s fluent Italian allowed him to move easily along Via del Babuino, or in popular restaurants that served black market ham and English gin. “In a way it is a pleasant life, if it weren’t for the nightmare of knowing that all the time we are being hunted.”
Profile Image for Daniela.
143 reviews4 followers
April 7, 2021
Le attuali miserie dell'Italia (e non solo) hanno origini lontane. Una voce indipendente e lucida che ha vissuto la Resistenza da dentro.
Profile Image for A.L. Sowards.
Author 22 books1,233 followers
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December 29, 2018
An interesting first-person account of a young OSS agent (Office of Strategic Services—the CIA’s precursor) who slipped into Rome just before the landings at Anzio (January 1944) and ended up staying until Rome was liberated (June 1944). He was at the top of the chain, so his work mostly involved shifting through all the information (and there was lots of it) in an attempt to check accuracy, avoid duplication, and pick out only the most important information to send to US 5th Army. He couldn’t send it all because if his radio operator stayed on the air too long, German direction-finding units would no doubt find and arrest him.

I thought the first part of the book was the most interesting—when Radio Vittoria was still functioning and they were relaying large amounts of useful information to the army. But then

A useful book for anyone interested in the occupation of Rome, but last year I read The Battle for Rome: The Germans, the Allies, the Partisans, and the Pope, September 1943--June 1944, by Robert Katz, and I’d actually recommend that one over this one. It covers the same time period and includes information about Tompkins’s mission. It’s also easier to find because it’s still in print, but I have to confess a love for decades-old books with tanned pages and uneven trimming. A Spy in Rome looks beautiful sitting on my bookshelf.
Profile Image for Jack Laschenski.
649 reviews7 followers
August 18, 2016
The true journal of a young man who was sent into Rome by General Donovan (OSS) to extract and transmit information about the Germans in Italy.

Horrifying - the vileness and murderousness of the Germans.

Electrifying the risks taken to bring down the Fascists by so many.

And awful the disorganization of the OSS and the American generals.

No recognition and no record in the Washington files for this intrepid person.

He survived and became a well known author in the US. Died in 2007,

Best known book: The Secret Life of plants
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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