Agents of Innocence
by David Ignatius
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Agents of Innocence is the book that established David Ignatius's reputation as a master of the novel of contemporary espionage. Into the treacherous world of shifting alliances and arcane subterfuge comes idealistic CIA man Tom Rogers. Posted in Beirut to penetrate the PLO and recruit a high-level operative, he soon learns the heavy price of innocence in a time and place that has no use for it.Tags
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Story crosses decades of tumultuous events in one of the most ethnically mixed and eventually most hard hit and almost utterly destroyed state in Middle East - Lebanon.
It is story of people from Lebanon, refugees from the Palestine, various parties from the neighboring countries (Syria, Israel, Italy) and US intelligence officers caught in the crossfire of unstable region in 60's and 70's up to the bloody days of 1980's. It is truly soul crashing to see how entire region starts the slow spiral to destruction and multiethnical hatred that will bring so much evil to this area that even now it is still in healing process.
Even more crushing is fate of people, principled people, working in the unprincipled world led by politicians that are show more by definition survivors and chameleons, ready to sacrifice anyone for the current political influence. So how can principled people work under these circumstances in a dangerous world of intelligence gathering? They can try and more often than not they will turn cynical. If this does not happen they will end up dead because world does not tolerate principled people unless they are saints (and therefore long long gone).
Excellent spy novel, written by someone that knows very well the Middle East and its problems.
Highly recommended to thriller and spy story aficionados. show less
It is story of people from Lebanon, refugees from the Palestine, various parties from the neighboring countries (Syria, Israel, Italy) and US intelligence officers caught in the crossfire of unstable region in 60's and 70's up to the bloody days of 1980's. It is truly soul crashing to see how entire region starts the slow spiral to destruction and multiethnical hatred that will bring so much evil to this area that even now it is still in healing process.
Even more crushing is fate of people, principled people, working in the unprincipled world led by politicians that are show more by definition survivors and chameleons, ready to sacrifice anyone for the current political influence. So how can principled people work under these circumstances in a dangerous world of intelligence gathering? They can try and more often than not they will turn cynical. If this does not happen they will end up dead because world does not tolerate principled people unless they are saints (and therefore long long gone).
Excellent spy novel, written by someone that knows very well the Middle East and its problems.
Highly recommended to thriller and spy story aficionados. show less
Interesting story that really held my attention. The historical events of the story are true and the fictional characters are based on real people, the names are changed of course. Very sad in that so many opportunities to make things right in the Middle East were handled poorly or ignored. After reading this, I recommend "The Good Spy" by Kai Bird to anyone wanting to learn more and to read about the actual people.
Well developed characters, moral ambiguity, recruitment of spies and a depressing ending.
Fantastic novel. Real events.
8.2
8.2
WashPost columnist
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Author Information

19 Works 3,205 Members
David Ignatius was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts on May 26, 1950. He received a B.A. from Harvard University in 1963 and a diploma in economics from Kings College, Cambridge, England, in 1975. He has worked as a reporter for the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times Magazine, and the Washington Post, where he is an associate editor. In 1985, show more he received the Edward Weintal Prize for diplomatic reporting from the Institute for the Study of Diplomacy. He is the author of several novels including Agents of Innocence, Siro, The Bank of Fear, A Firing Offense, Body of Lies, The Increment, and The Director. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Agents of Innocence
- Original publication date
- 1987-09-14
- Epigraph
- Terror, and the pit, and the snare
are upon you, O inhabitant of the earth!
He who flees at the sound of the terror
shall fall into the pit;
and he who climbs out of the pit
shall be caught in the snare.
For... (show all) the windows of heaven are opened,
and the foundations of the earth tremble.
--ISAIAH, 24:17-18 - Dedication
- For Eve and Elisa,
and the nameless friends who shared
their knowledge of the Middle East
in the hope that it would do some good. - First words
- Prologue
Beirut; April 1983
Fuad heard the bomb twice. - Publisher's editor
- Healey, Linda
- Original language
- English
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Statistics
- Members
- 299
- Popularity
- 106,298
- Reviews
- 5
- Rating
- (3.83)
- Languages
- English, German, Portuguese, Spanish
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 18
- ASINs
- 7



























































