A Spy Among Friends

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A Spy Among Friends Page 40

by Ben MacIntyre


  ‘she finally admitted’: ibid.

  ‘passionate loyalty and devotion’: Elliott, Umbrella, p. 182.

  ‘Although I had put the fear of God’: Elliott, My Little Eye, p. 94.

  ‘Eleanor, is that you?’: Eleanor Philby, The Spy I Loved, p. 69.

  ‘Dear Nick’: undated letter from Kim Philby to Nicholas Elliott, Cleveland Cram collection, Georgetown University Library, Washington DC.

  ‘It was ridiculous to suppose’: Elliott, My Little Eye, p. 95.

  ‘an incredibly clumsy piece’: ibid.

  ‘many hours of discussion’: ibid.

  ‘because first’: ibid.

  ‘tragic episode’: ibid., p. 97.

  ‘Put some flowers for me’: ibid., p. 98.

  Chapter 20: Three Old Spies

  ‘elite’: Philby, My Silent War, p. xxxii.

  ‘He never revealed’: Modin, My Five Cambridge Friends, p. 270.

  ‘Englishman to his fingertips’: ibid.

  ‘homeland’: Borovik, The Philby Files, p. 373.

  ‘belonged’: Murray Sayle, ‘London-Moscow: The Spies are Jousting’, Sunday Times, 6 January 1968.

  ‘wholly and irreversibly English’: Cave Brown, Treason in the Blood, p. 527.

  ‘Aluminium bats, white balls’: Knightley, The Master Spy, p. 239.

  ‘the ghastly din’: ibid., p. 253.

  ‘hooligans inflamed’: ibid.

  ‘What is more important’: Eleanor Philby, The Spy I Loved, p. 78.

  The party, of course’: ibid.

  ‘stayed the course’: Philby, My Silent War, p. xxxi.

  ‘If you only knew what hell’: Balfour Paul, Bagpipes in Babylon, p. 186.

  ‘Friendship is the most important thing’: ibid.

  ‘painful to think that during’: Cave Brown, Treason in the Blood, p. 488.

  ‘I wasn’t laughing at them’: Knightley, The Master Spy, p. 254.

  ‘It had travelled with him’: Elliott, Umbrella, p. 189.

  ‘supreme example of schizophrenia’: ibid.

  ‘He betrayed many people’: Eleanor Philby, The Spy I Loved, p. 175.

  ‘No one can ever really know’: ibid., p. xiv.

  ‘The emotional wreckage’: Holzman, James Jesus Angleton, p. 206.

  ‘Jim just continued to think’: Mangold, Cold Warrior, p. 48.

  Never again would he permit’: Martin, Wilderness of Mirrors, p. 193.

  ‘This is all Kim’s work’: Holzman, James Jesus Angleton, p. 207.

  ‘He had trusted him’: Elliott, My Little Eye, p. 81.

  ‘I don’t know that the damage’: Martin, Wilderness of Mirrors, p. 193.

  ‘come clean in the Philby case’: Cave Brown, Treason in the Blood, p. 565.

  ‘To be in administration’: Elliott, Umbrella, p. 179.

  ‘Rather to my surprise’: ibid., p. 192.

  ‘a modern Cecil Rhodes’: ibid., p. 191.

  ‘the Harry Lime of Cheapside’: ibid., p. 192.

  ‘incapable of leading that kind of life’: ibid., p. 195.

  ‘gift for dowsing’: ibid.

  ‘alternative to involvement’: Elliott, My Little Eye, p. 65.

  ‘showing a quite unjustified lack’: ibid., p. 109.

  ‘extremely well over an extended period’: Elliott, Umbrella, p. 182.

  ‘I have naturally given thought’: ibid.

  ‘Outwardly he was a kindly man’: ibid., p. 183.

  ‘a façade, in a schizophrenic personality’: ibid., p. 190.

  ‘sad exiled life’: ibid., p. 189.

  ‘dreary people, a spying servant’: ibid.

  ‘wasted in a futile cause’: Elliott, My Little Eye, p. 99.

  ‘decided to betray’: Elliott, Umbrella, p. 190.

  ‘He had charm to burn’: ibid., p. 189.

  ‘The whole thing was staged’: Knightley, The Master Spy, p. 215.

  ‘desire to spare SIS another spy scandal’: Borovik, The Philby Files, p. 323.

  ‘blissful peace’: ibid., p. 357.

  ‘How sleepless must be Kim Philby’s nights’: ibid., p. 373.

  ‘He’s a totally sad man’: Knightley, The Master Spy, p. 5.

  ‘like Glasgow on a Saturday night’: Tom Driberg, Guy Burgess: A Portrait with Background (London, 1956), p. 100.

  ‘burdensome’: Knightley, The Master Spy, p. 235.

  ‘Any confession involves’: Rufina Philby, Mikhail Lyubimov and Hayden Peake, The Private Life of Kim Philby: The Moscow Years (London, 1999), p. 257.

  ‘showed no interest’: Elliott, Umbrella, p. 185.

  ‘one of the better ones’: Knightley, The Master Spy, p. 257.

  ‘tireless struggle in the cause’: ibid., p. 260.

  ‘My lips have hitherto been sealed’: Elliott, My Little Eye, p. 95.

  ‘a tremendous fluttering’: ibid.

  ‘undistinguished, albeit mildly notorious’: ibid., p. 10.

  ‘I feel I have been’: ibid.

  A Note on the Author

  Ben Macintyre is a columnist and Associate Editor on The Times. He has worked as the newspaper’s correspondent in New York, Paris and Washington. He is the author of nine previous books including Agent Zigzag, shortlisted for the Costa Biography Award and the Galaxy British Book Award for Biography of the Year 2008, the no. 1 bestseller Operation Mincemeat and most recently the Richard and Judy bestseller Double Cross. He lives in north London with his wife and three children.

  By the Same Author

  Forgotten Fatherland

  The Napoleon of Crime

  A Foreign Field

  Josiah the Great

  Agent Zigzag

  For Your Eyes Only

  The Last Word

  Operation Mincemeat

  Double Cross

  Also available by Ben Macintyre

  Agent Zigzag

  The True Wartime Story of Eddie Chapman: Lover, Traitor, Hero, Spy

  One December night in 1942, a Nazi parachutist landed in a Cambridgeshire field. His mission: to sabotage the British war effort. His name was Eddie Chapman, but he would shortly become MI5’s Agent Zigzag. Dashing and louche, courageous and unpredictable, inside the traitor was a hero, inside the villain, a man of conscience: the problem for Chapman, his many lovers and his spymasters, was knowing where one ended and the other began. Ben Macintyre weaves together diaries, letters, photographs, memories and top-secret MI5 files to create the exhilarating account of Britain’s most sensational double agent.

  ‘As engrossing as any thriller and more improbable than most’

  Daily Telegraph

  ‘For anyone interested in the Second World War, spying, romance, skullduggery or the hidden chambers of the human mind, it would be impossible to recommend it too highly’

  Book of the Week, Mail on Sunday

  ‘Superb’

  John le Carré

  Operation Mincemeat

  The True Spy Story that Changed the Course of World War II

  One overcast April morning in 1943, a fisherman notices a corpse floating in the sea off the coast of Spain. When the body is brought ashore, he is identified as a British soldier, Major William Martin of the Royal Marines. A leather attaché case, secured to his belt, reveals an intelligence goldmine: top-secret documents Allied invasion plans.

  But Major William Martin never existed. The body is that of a dead Welsh tramp and every single document is fake. Operation Mincemeat is the incredible true story of the most extraordinary deception ever planned by Churchill’s spies – an outrageous lie that travelled from a Whitehall basement, all the way to Hitler’s desk.

  ‘With its fantastic plot and its cast of eccentric characters, the book reads like the most improbable of spy stories. It is a tribute to Macintyre’s skill that we never for a moment forget that it is actually all true’

  Daily Telegraph

  ‘Macintyre has a journalist’s nose for a great story, and a novelist’s skill in its narration ... spellbinding’
r />   Craig Brown, Mail on Sunday

  ‘Compelling’

  William Boyd, The Times

  Double Cross

  The True Story of the D-Day Spies

  D-Day, 6 June 1944, the turning point of the Second World War, was a victory of arms. But it was also a triumph for a different kind of operation: one of deceit...

  At the heart of the deception was the ‘Double Cross System’, a team of double agents whose bravery, treachery, greed and inspiration succeeded in convincing the Nazis that Calais and Norway, not Normandy, were the targets of the 150,000-strong Allied invasion force. These were not conventional warriors, but their masterpiece of deceit saved thousands of lives. Their codenames were Bronx, Brutus, Treasure, Tricycle and Garbo. This is their story.

  ‘Macintyre is a first-class narrative historian ... as pacy as a thriller and better written than most’ Sunday Telegraph

  ‘Enthralling ... A book so gripping that I even found myself reading it in lifts, frequently emitting snorts of incredulity. A reminder that heroism can be found in the most unlikely places’ Evening Standard

  ‘Utterly gripping’ Antony Beevor

  Order your copy:

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  First published in Great Britain 2014

  This electronic edition published in 2014 by Bloomsbury Publishing Plc

  Copyright © Ben Macintyre 2014

  Afterword copyright © David Cornwell 2014

  The moral right of the author has been asserted

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