Books
The Spy and the Traitor
A gripping history of espionage where trust, betrayal, and nerve matter as much as geopolitics.
Ben Macintyre turns Oleg Gordievsky’s Cold War story into the rare nonfiction book that can make you read faster without becoming sloppy. The tension is real, but the reporting stays neat.
What stayed with me
What stayed was the fragility of trust. Intelligence work in the book is built on secrecy, but it is also built on relationship. Every decision feels charged because belief in another person is always one betrayal away from collapse.
What it changed
It changed how I think about narrative pacing. The book proves that factual writing does not need to choose between seriousness and propulsion. You can honor complexity and still move with urgency.
Why I still keep it on the shelf
I still recommend it because it reminds me that history can feel immediate when the writing is disciplined enough. It turns geopolitical tension back into human risk.