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Review: The Adventures of a Real Life Spy - Loved this book! It was very enlightening about how spies actually work. And the subject was the perfect spy, I think because she was a young mother and was not suspected. The book follows her career around the world during the critical years of WWII. Very interesting and engaging story!! Review: Good true spy story - Well told, and easy to follow biography of Ursula Kuckynski, “Sonja” a lucky, effective and female Soviet spy. Many of the names of WWII espionage are mentioned and daring stories of espionage beginning in Shanghai. Many countries, multiple lovers and children and hundreds of secrets. Escaped Stalin’s purges, maintained the love of friends and family and “came in from the cold” to become a prolific successful writer. Many pictures of main characters.
K**E
The Adventures of a Real Life Spy
Loved this book! It was very enlightening about how spies actually work. And the subject was the perfect spy, I think because she was a young mother and was not suspected. The book follows her career around the world during the critical years of WWII. Very interesting and engaging story!!
P**F
Good true spy story
Well told, and easy to follow biography of Ursula Kuckynski, “Sonja” a lucky, effective and female Soviet spy. Many of the names of WWII espionage are mentioned and daring stories of espionage beginning in Shanghai. Many countries, multiple lovers and children and hundreds of secrets. Escaped Stalin’s purges, maintained the love of friends and family and “came in from the cold” to become a prolific successful writer. Many pictures of main characters.
D**O
Another triumph for Mr Macintyre
I have read most of Macintyre’s books and they are all gripping. I found Agent Sonya a little more difficult to get into but once I did it did not disappoint. I have read reviews that have criticized the book for its subject matter. How can we relate to a Soviet spy? How can we feel anything for someone who worked for Stalin against the West? I think that is an over simplification. I tried to put myself in the shoes of Ursula Maria Kuczynski, a young German Jew horrified at the rise of fascism in Europe in the 20’s and 30’s. Like Ursula I would like to think that I would do all I could to resist and to fight. The natural vehicle for Ursula to travel in to conduct that fight was the communist party and she joined in 1926, just as Hitler was rising to prominence. European communists fought fascism in Spain, Germany, the Far East and Eastern Europe and were a major part of the French resistance. Ursula becomes a committed communist (and anti fascist) and an accomplished asset as we follow her from Germany to China and thereafter to Switzerland and finally to the UK. This is where the story becomes a little muddy for many. Yes, Ursula spied for Stalin, a man as despotic and evil as Hitler. But at that time Churchill and Roosevelt were working with the Soviet leader and we were allies. Ursula spied against the Nazi’s for the Soviets while in the UK but she also helped to infiltrate communist spies into the US atomic weapons program. In doing so she helped the Soviets to develop their own atomic bomb. Obviously this puts her beyond the pale for many people but the world was a different place 60 and 70 years ago. Who knows, without Ursula maybe we would not have had a world where both sides of the Cold War had the means to totally annihilate the other? Maybe in that scenario, without the promise of “mutually assured destruction”, a Nixon or a Reagan or, heaven forbid, a Trump may have been tempted to wipe out half the planet. We’ll never know. A great read, chock full of exceptionally interesting characters like Agnes Smedley, Richard Sorge and Sandro Rado and another triumph for Mr Macintyre.
J**D
Leading Behind The Scenes
When I see Ben Macintyre's name on a new book I buy it and start reading it right away, certain in the knowledge that I will be enjoying a well written, well researched, fascinating chronicle of modern espionage. Agent Sonya is a worthy successor to such brilliant Macintyre works as The Spy and the Traitor and A Spy Among Friends, with a critical difference: the major protagonist is female. Ursula Kuczynski was a member of a prominent and wealthy German Jewish family active in Berlin's intellectual and artistic circles. In her childhood she lived through Germany's defeat in World War I, and as a teenager she witnessed the mounting tensions and rising anti-Semitism that led to the fall of the Weimar Republic and its replacement with Hitler's Third Reich. Like many in her generation Ursula became a Communist, not so much for ideological reasons as because she saw the Soviet Union as the strongest enemy of Fascism. Helped by her family's left-wing connections, Ursula journeyed to the Soviet Union, was recruited as a spy by Stalin's many-tentacled intelligence services, and spent years in Shanghai, Mukden, Moscow, Switzerland, and eventually rural England on various espionage assignments using the code name Sonya. Along the way she had a passionate affair with another Soviet spy, Richard Sorge, married or lived with three different men by whom she had three children, and jumped from one hair raising adventure to another. Her sex was an asset, since the Soviet and other intelligence services with whom she dealt were all highly male chauvinistic, and she was able to fly under the radar for many years, seeming to be nothing more than a nice normal wife and mother. Her most important contribution to the Soviet espionage effort was her connection with the physicist Klaus Fuchs, who passed an enormous amount of information on British and American efforts to build an atomic bomb through her to the Kremlin. Eventually, after Fuchs was exposed and arrested, Ursula and her family escaped to East Germany, where she lived for most of the rest of her life. Ursula's story seems too incredible even for the pages of a Fleming or Deighton spy thriller, but it all really happened, making Macintyre's extensively documented tale just as riveting as any James Bond adventure. If after reading Agent Sonya you are hungry for more such tales, I can recommend any of Macintyre's books, most especially A Spy Among Friends, which is about Kim Philby, another Soviet spy with whom Ursula had an indirect connection.
R**R
An excellent biography!
Ben Macintyre has done it, again! Agent Sonya - lover, mother, soldier, spy - is an extremely good biography. Macintyre has written several biographies about famous spies. And Agent Sonya fits well into this series. This is the story of the female spy Ursula Kuczynski. And what a story! Like the writer’s other books about espionage and spies, it is thrilling - and can be read like a thriller. This is biography writing at its best. The writer paints the big canvas: Here is drama, passion, fear, paranoia, deception, danger. We are presented to a large numbers of individuals, one more intriguing and fascinating than the other. The book contains accurately written history, in depth descriptions of people’s psychology, all put together in a most readable way. My best compliment: A good read! I highly recommend this book.
J**S
Amazing story
Excellent research and a cast of compelling characters. Ursula is brilliant, brave and resourceful and a woman of her convictions. However, I found the writing rather plodding and long winded. I think the book could have used more rigorous editing. I would still recommend the book for the great story and the painstaking research.
R**D
Incredible True Story of Soviet Spy
This biographical story of the Soviet Union's female spy who served from before World War II through the Cold War is a gripping read. It is not a "who dun it" it is a "how did she do it." The author takes you over much of the world and into the details of wartime espionage. The best thing I can say is that once I started reading it, I could hardly put it down. One quibble, the author has Ursula putting away her secret radio transmitter one time in 1938 and then "turning on her transistor radio and tuning in to the BBC...," but transistor radios were not invented until the 1950's. He should have just said: "turning on her house radio." I strongly recommend this book to anyone interested in WWII or Cold War history or to anyone who just wants to read a great spy story.
A**T
The Housewife Who Gave the A-Bomb to Russia
Awarded posthumously the Order of Friendship, Ursula Kuczynski, code name Sonya, was dubbed a "super agent of military intelligence" by Vladimir Putin. The reader follows Ursula's communist activities beginning with her teenage years and encompassing stays on three continents. She spoke German, French, English, Chinese and Russian. She had many handlers and assets, two husbands, three children and several lovers. Her gender and role as mother and housewife were her greatest covers. No one assumed she was a spy. MI5 had its suspicions and she was interrogated, but could not be broken. Her greatest recruitment was Klaus Fuchs, a German emigre who worked on the atomic bomb at the University of Birmingham and later on the Manhattan Project in the USA. He gave her over 500 pages of atomic research which Ursula forwarded to Moscow. Both Fuchs and Kuczynski believed that only nuclear parity between east and west could insure peace. Macintyre includes detailed end notes for each chapter. He provides photos of Ursula, her family, handlers and assets. At times, the author uses conversations which lends this work a tone of fiction. This reviewer found the details of all Ursula's assets, contacts, family members and MI5 interrogators, over done and tedious. Though Ursula detested the Non-Aggression Pact Russia signed with Germany and was horrified by Stalin's murderous purges, she remained a true naive believer in communism. The book is worth reading because it includes both the tactics of a master spy as well as the history of the rise and fall of communism.
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