Books reviewed in this issue
General
National Security Intelligence and Ethics, edited by Seumas Miller, Mitt Regan, and Patrick F. Walsh
Nothing Is Beyond Our Reach: America’s Techno-Spy Empire, by Kristie Macrakis
A Short Introduction to Geospatial Intelligence, by John (Jack) O’Connor
Memoir
Nothing If Not Eventful: A Memoir of a Life in CIA, by Thomas L. Ahern, Jr.
History
The FBI and the Mexican Revolutionists 1908–1914, by Heribert von Feilitzsch and Charles H. Harris III
Lockheed Blackbird: Beyond the Secret Missions—The Missing Chapters, by Paul F. Crickmore
Spy For No Country: The Story of Ted Hall the Teenage Atomic Spy Who May Have Saved the World, by Dave Lindorff
SPYING: From the Fall of Jericho to the Fall of the Wall: An Intelligence Primer Based on the Lecture Notes of Professor Arthur S. Hulnick, edited by John D. Woodward, Jr.
Intelligence Abroad
From Red Terror to Terrorist State: Russia’s Intelligence Services and Their Fight for World Domination from Felix Dzerzhinsky to Vladimir Putin 1917–201?, by Yuri Felshtinsky & Vladimir Popov
Targeted as a Spy: The Surveillance of an American Diplomat in Communist Romania, by Ernest H. Latham, Jr. (Reviewed by Graham Alexander and Hayden Peake)
Fiction
Moscow X: A Novel by David McCloskey (Reviewed by Graham Alexander)
The Peacock and the Sparrow, by I. S. Berry (Reviewed by John Ehrman)