Bookbot

Phillip Knightley

    Phillip Knightley se consolidó como un periodista de investigación con un profundo interés en la cobertura de guerra, la propaganda y el espionaje. Durante sus dos décadas en The Sunday Times, se convirtió en un miembro fundamental de su equipo Insight, ganando dos veces el prestigioso premio Periodista del Año. Su amplio conocimiento de la comunidad internacional de inteligencia, cultivado a través de la interacción directa con jefes de inteligencia globales, ofrece una perspectiva única para explorar operaciones y motivaciones complejas. El trabajo de Knightley profundiza consistentemente en las complejidades de descubrir y difundir la verdad.

    Kim Philby, Geheimagent
    Lost Treasures: With Lawrence in Arabia
    Philby. The Spy Who Betrayed a Generation
    The second oldest profession
    An Affair of State
    The first casualty : the war correspondent as hero, propagandist, and myth-maker from the Crimea to Iraq
    • 2003
    • 2002

      Lost Treasures: With Lawrence in Arabia

      • 256 páginas
      • 9 horas de lectura

      It was 1918 in Jerusalem, when the admiring young American scholar and journalist Lowell Thomas first met T.E. Lawrence. He went on to write With Lawrence in Arabia, a book that sparked the Lawrence of Arabia legend and was the basis of the celebrated film. With brilliant narrative verve, Lowell recounts the exploits of the young British agent who managed to weld disparate and warring Arab tribes into a formidable mobile fighting force—a guerilla army that would defeat the Turks in the Arab Revolt, sealing the fate of the Ottoman Empire in the Middle East during World War I. On a canvas whose background is the fierce, inhospitable desert and in whose foreground stride the Emir Feisal, King Hussein I of the Hedjaz, the British General Allenby, and the strange, hypnotic figure of Lawrence himself, Thomas paints a vivid portrait of the “modern knight of Arabia.”

      Lost Treasures: With Lawrence in Arabia
    • 1989

      Leben und Ansichten des ehemaligen Cambridge-Studenten und späteren Moskauer Meisterspions (gest. 1988); eine Darstellung, die auf ausführlichen Gesprächen des Journalisten Knightley mit dem Maulwurf basiert.

      Kim Philby, Geheimagent
    • 1987

      A number-one bestseller upon its initial release in 1987, this updated book inspired Andrew Lloyd-Webber to create a musical about Stephen Ward. It reinterprets the Profumo Scandal, offering a deeper understanding of its complex figure, Ward, and the broader implications of one of the past century's greatest scandals. This work serves as a major expose of a government cover-up that has endured for fifty years, detailing a powerful narrative of sexual compulsion, political scandal, police corruption, judicial abuse, and betrayal. The authors present never-before-heard testimonies uncovered since the scandal erupted, utilizing startling new evidence, including Ward’s unpublished memoirs and numerous interviews with individuals who have now come forward. This account dismantles the decades-long cover-up, revealing why the government, police, judiciary, and security forces conspired to frame Ward. During the Cold War, amid the Cuban Missile Crisis, Ward acted as an intermediary between British and Soviet governments. The authors illustrate how his "trial of the century" stemmed from unprecedented corruption and political malice, ultimately making an innocent man a scapegoat. This epic tale of sex, lies, and governmental abuse nearly toppled the government and shook the espionage communities of America, Britain, and the Soviet Union to their core, finally allowing Ward's complete story to be told through meticulous research and s

      An Affair of State
    • 1986

      The spy is as old as history but spy services are quite new. Britain founded the first, Her Majesty's Secret Intelligence Service, in dubious circumstances in 1909. Others followed until no country considered itself a nation unless it had a corps of spies. The biggest and most expensive is America's Central Intelligence Agency, the CIA, formed as recently as 1947. The CIA's principle enemy was the Soviet Union's KGB, and the clash of these two giants has been the thrilling stuff of history, novels, films and plays. In assessing the real role of the spy, Phillip Knightley brilliantly takes all the real characters of the spies themselves - Mata Hari, Sidney Reilly, Richard Sorge, Kim Philby, George Blake, James Jesus Angleton, Ruth Kuczinsky, the Rosenbergs - and answers the crucial question. Did they make any difference to the course of history? Or was spying the biggest confidence trick of our time?

      The second oldest profession
    • 1969

      A novelist wouldn't dare invent the story contained herein. That a son of the British establishment could, during a 30 year secret service career, be a Communist agent is too far-fetched for fiction. Here's the story of how Philby did it, of what he did & its consequences; of how he betrayed his country, service, friends & the class which nurtured, shaped & protected him.Authors' PrefaceIntroduction1. BeginningsThe man in Dzerzinsky SquareBoyhood of three spiesThe slave of GodThe Cambridge MarxistsCommitment in ViennaJoining the establishment2. PenetrationThe Spanish decorationThe phony warThe secret worldThe rise of Kim Philby3. ExploitationThe new enemyThe Volkov incidentThe priceless secretsThe Albanian subversion4. DownfallCrack-upGetawayThe secret trialA field agent?Philby's comebackEndgame in BeirutThrough the curtain

      Philby. The Spy Who Betrayed a Generation