
Henry R. Schlesinger
Author of Spycraft: The Secret History of the CIA's Spytechs, from Communism to Al-Qaeda
Works by Henry R. Schlesinger
Spycraft: The Secret History of the CIA's Spytechs, from Communism to Al-Qaeda (2009) 470 copies, 9 reviews
Spy Sites of Washington, DC: A Guide to the Capital Region's Secret History (2017) — Co-Author — 34 copies
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Reviews
3.5 stars. The Cold War spycraft history is absolutely what I was hoping to read about. The post-9/11 segments, though, are understandably thin.
Disability tag due to an anecdote about disability fail. A tech was making a super-secret puzzle box for a field asset to keep secret things in. These boxes involved pressing one piece and sliding another, etc. Turns out the asset had severely limited use of his hands due to severe arthritis & the handler had never mentioned it to the tech. show more Which...yeah. Way to pay attention.
I wish quite a lot that there had been more discussion of women in the service, and now and then they specify "the men and women of ___ dept", but very few of the women get any page time. It's especially annoying because those who do sound completely fascinating. show less
Disability tag due to an anecdote about disability fail. A tech was making a super-secret puzzle box for a field asset to keep secret things in. These boxes involved pressing one piece and sliding another, etc. Turns out the asset had severely limited use of his hands due to severe arthritis & the handler had never mentioned it to the tech. show more Which...yeah. Way to pay attention.
I wish quite a lot that there had been more discussion of women in the service, and now and then they specify "the men and women of ___ dept", but very few of the women get any page time. It's especially annoying because those who do sound completely fascinating. show less
There was definitely a lot of interesting information in this book, but it suffers from strange organization, and from incomplete information.
The technological achievements of the CIA and the KGB are quite impressive, and it was fascinating reading about some of the things they created and how they used them. However, the book is very anecdotal, and a lot of the anecdotes peter out at the end... whether that's because the climactic ending is classified, or because Wallace sets them up to be show more more interesting than they really are is hard to say.
The book suffers from what appear to be several overlapping organizational structures. Sometimes it is chronological, sometimes it is thematic, and sometimes it feels like a bunch of old guys sitting around swapping whatever war stories come to mind. The last few chapters are an overview of spy techniques and how spies use technology, which is really weird - those chapters would have been much more useful at the beginning of the book, but because they were at the end, they re-explain information that has already been covered earlier in the book.
What bothered me the most about the book, though, was the information that was not in it. Perhaps some of this is just my personal agenda, but I would have liked more information about the overall impact of the technology developed and the information intercepted with that technology - in other words, was all of this time and money worth the bother? The book also dropped some tantalizing details (for instance, there is a section that talks about small bombs they developed that could, for instance, go off if suddenly plunged into darkness, so that if they were attached to a train, they would blow the train up when it entered a tunnel), but then didn't talk about how much the technology was actually used (how many trains did we blow up? why?). The book also came across as rather defensive at times - for instance, there are several pages about what MKULTRA was not, but very little information about what it actually was, and whether or not the psychological experiments damaged anyone.
All in all, the book is interesting, but definitely feels like the "official line" and I found the lack of big picture to be unsatisfying. show less
The technological achievements of the CIA and the KGB are quite impressive, and it was fascinating reading about some of the things they created and how they used them. However, the book is very anecdotal, and a lot of the anecdotes peter out at the end... whether that's because the climactic ending is classified, or because Wallace sets them up to be show more more interesting than they really are is hard to say.
The book suffers from what appear to be several overlapping organizational structures. Sometimes it is chronological, sometimes it is thematic, and sometimes it feels like a bunch of old guys sitting around swapping whatever war stories come to mind. The last few chapters are an overview of spy techniques and how spies use technology, which is really weird - those chapters would have been much more useful at the beginning of the book, but because they were at the end, they re-explain information that has already been covered earlier in the book.
What bothered me the most about the book, though, was the information that was not in it. Perhaps some of this is just my personal agenda, but I would have liked more information about the overall impact of the technology developed and the information intercepted with that technology - in other words, was all of this time and money worth the bother? The book also dropped some tantalizing details (for instance, there is a section that talks about small bombs they developed that could, for instance, go off if suddenly plunged into darkness, so that if they were attached to a train, they would blow the train up when it entered a tunnel), but then didn't talk about how much the technology was actually used (how many trains did we blow up? why?). The book also came across as rather defensive at times - for instance, there are several pages about what MKULTRA was not, but very little information about what it actually was, and whether or not the psychological experiments damaged anyone.
All in all, the book is interesting, but definitely feels like the "official line" and I found the lack of big picture to be unsatisfying. show less
A fascinating description of both the hardware and "tradecraft" used by the US from the end of WWII to the present. It demonstrates that the hardware was essential in enabling the agent and his handlers to accomplish their tasks. It also showed how the human element could make a technologically brilliant piece of hardware useless. And that "low tech" solutions are often the optimum solution to a situation. All in all, a wonderful read.
In 500 non-encrypted pages, the reader learns the basic elements of espionage and the real history of the first 50 years of the CIA's Office of Technical Services. The tools of espionage were always at the cutting edge of technology. Sometimes, commercially-produced electronics were the basis for a CIA device, but more often, the demands of our spies drove the developments that would later give us pagers and miniature digital cameras. James Bond's toys were more realistic than most people show more ever realized. Behind them was a dedicated group of clever, driven technologists who supplied agents with better means of surveillance and covert communications. More than just a guide to gadgets, this book tells a meaningful story about the importance of intelligence to national security, and the unfortunate events that occur when the intelligence network is compromised. show less
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- Rating
- 3.7
- Reviews
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- ISBNs
- 15


