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The Haunted Wood: Soviet Espionage in America - The Stalin Era
by
Drawing upon previously secret KGB records released exclusively to Allen Weinstein and Alexander Vassiliev, The Haunted Wood reveals for the first time the riveting story of Soviet espionage's "golden age" in the United States, from the 1930s through the early cold war.
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Paperback, 448 pages
Published
March 14th 2000
by Modern Library
(first published 1998)
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Start your review of The Haunted Wood: Soviet Espionage in America - The Stalin Era
Catching up with modern American history : it's a jolt to realize that we had swarms of US-Commie agents from 30s-50s, but this explains the Red Scare and the flamboyant arrival of Joe McCarthy. Crackpot idealism drew some to spying; with others it was a manic need to feel important - the only route to identity.
The most famous deceiver was Alger Hiss. One pundit called him the greatest actor the US ever produced. This intriguing volume scoops up Hiss and other spies. Regrettably the writing is c ...more
The most famous deceiver was Alger Hiss. One pundit called him the greatest actor the US ever produced. This intriguing volume scoops up Hiss and other spies. Regrettably the writing is c ...more
There is an old saying that truth is often stranger than fiction. Works of non-fiction can often prove that to be the case, revealing sometimes hidden or forgotten stories from our history. The Cold War, that epic conflict of ideologies fought largely in the shadows and still influencing the world we live in today, is just such an example. While so many great fictional spy stories were inspired by it ranging from Ian Fleming's James Bond novels to John le Carré's George Smiley, the real world of
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The first half of this book covers the period leading up to World War II, and is not that interesting. A better author could have had a eye for excluding or passing quickly over some of the content, but the writers were going for historical completeness rather than readability. Throughout the book there is an overabundance of blockquotes, footnotes, and many words in quotation marks to show that it is not the authors designation or description but the sources, and all of this breaks up the flow
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After the collapse of the Soviet Union, historian Allen Weinstein was offered an unprecedented, and, as it would turn out, singular, chance to rummage through the KGB archives. Out of those archives, he brought this book, which describes the Soviet Union's extensive spying campaign in the United States during the presidency of Franklin Roosevelt. It's understandable that Weinstein wanted to get as much of this information into print as possible, so parts of this book can read more like a referen
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This book is "what it says on the tin": Soviet Espionage during Stalin's reign. It focuses on the four or five years leading up to America's entry into WWII, the WWII years, and the espionage dealing with atomic secrets.
Most of my understanding of Soviet espionage is what happened during the Cold War years. There really isn't any overlap here. The authors say that the earliest document they uncovered that identifies the US as the USSR's foremost opponent is 1951, which is a bit after the events ...more
Most of my understanding of Soviet espionage is what happened during the Cold War years. There really isn't any overlap here. The authors say that the earliest document they uncovered that identifies the US as the USSR's foremost opponent is 1951, which is a bit after the events ...more
The Haunted Wood finds the convergence between human nature, sovereign statecraft and ideology. The chapters are organized loosely into biographical vignettes which follow players of both great and doubtful value to soviet intelligence. Weinstein grants them agency, and digs up a scant degree of complexity at minimum for each, through painstaking and well-referenced research. The cardboard cutouts of shadowy figures or ideological cartoons we are used to reading have been rigorously excised and
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The "Haunted Wood" is often cited by defenders of the Red Scares as demonstrating that Soviet spying was, indeed, a major threat. After reading it, the conclusion I come off with is a little different: that while there were spies in the 1930s and during World War II, Russian espionage operations were nearly totally disabled by the 1950s when McCarthyism occurred. From the book:
"As for the entire effort to penetrate key American institutions by Moscow's intelligence operatives in the 1930s and wa ...more
"As for the entire effort to penetrate key American institutions by Moscow's intelligence operatives in the 1930s and wa ...more
The American and Russian authors, Weinstein and Vassiliev, pieced this together from an exhaustive review of documents released in the late 90s by the KGB, CIA and NSA, including thousands of translated intercepts sent by Soviet agents in the US and USSR during WWII. It provides a fascinating glimpse at the espionage activities of Alger Hiss, the Rosenburgs, the daughter of a US Ambassador to Nazi Germany and many, many others. It is quite humorous in spots, especially when comparing the spy-tra
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Any one who thinks that Alger Hiss wasn't a Soviet spy needs to read this. It also illuminates the involvement of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg who where as part of an elaborate spy ring demonstrates how the much bigger fish - Harry Gold and David Greenglass - should have been executed and not them.
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The tales are fact. I didn't find them that interesting though. It is history but it isn't an easy flowing read. Also the stories lack Hollywood pizzazz. Not that it's necessary, but it won't please someone looking for James Bond.
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Sep 30, 2007
aksnowbunny Proden
rated it
really liked it
Recommends it for:
a history buff intrigued by the kgb
Shelves:
historycoldwar
i love spies. and history. this was an intrigueing book that i couldn't put down about the secret communications between our country, the kgb and the rest of the world.
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I didn't read the whole thing but did spend some time in Chap 3 about the case on Martha Dodd. A lot of detail here but maybe overkill for those who don't need minute by minute reports.
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Mainly written from some archived and temporarily declassified russian kgb documents, this is super interesting from a cold war spy perspective. 'nightmover' is nowhere near as interesting.
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This book could be shortened by 100 pages and it wouldn't harm this book. A tad slow at times, but riveting nonetheless.
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Jan 16, 2009
Jack
is currently reading it
Dry reading - but very eerie.
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Allen Weinstein was a historian and educator who served as the Ninth Archivist of the United States. Weinstein was a cofounder of the National Endowment for Democracy in 1983. His work included research into Soviet espionage acitivties during the 1930s and 1940s, topics he covered in his books Perjury: The Hiss–Chambers Case and The Haunted Wood: Soviet Espionage in America—The Stalin Era. Weinste
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