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Bridge of Spies
- A True Story of the Cold War
- Narrated by: Jonathan Keeble
- Length: 10 hrs and 55 mins
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Publisher's summary
The “riveting, meticulously researched, and beautifully written” (Ben Macintyre, author of The Spy and the Traitor) true story chronicles the first and most legendary prisoner exchange of the Cold War, between East and West at Berlin’s Glienicke Bridge and Checkpoint Charlie
“A marvelous saga of dangerous missions, helter-skelter innovation, and clandestine activity.”—The Wall Street Journal
Who were the three men the American and Soviet superpowers exchanged at Berlin’s Glienicke Bridge and Checkpoint Charlie in the first prisoner exchange of the nuclear age? Bridge of Spies vividly traces their paths to that electrifying moment on February 10, 1962, when their fates helped to define the conflicts and lethal undercurrents of the most dangerous years of the cold war.
Bridge of Spies is the true story of three extraordinary characters—William Fisher, alias Rudolf Abel, a British-born KGB agent arrested by the FBI in New York City and jailed as a Soviet superspy for trying to steal America’s most precious nuclear secrets; Gary Powers, the American U-2 pilot who was captured when his plane was shot down while flying a reconnaissance mission over central Russia; and Frederic Pryor, a young American graduate student in Berlin mistakenly identified as a spy, arrested, and held without charge by the Stasi, East Germany’s secret police.
Giles Whittell masterfully weaves the three strands of this story together and reconstructs the brinkmanship and covert mind games that brought the United States and Soviet Union so close to a hot war in the early 1960s. The exchange that day at two of the most sensitive points along the Iron Curtain represented the first step back from where the superpowers had stood since the building of the Berlin Wall the previous summer—on the brink of World War III.
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Before he remade himself as the master spy known as Garbo, Juan Pujol was nothing more than a Barcelona poultry farmer. But as Garbo, he turned in a masterpiece of deception that changed the course of World War II. Posing as the Nazis’ only reliable spy inside England, he created an imaginary million-man army, invented armadas out of thin air, and brought a vast network of fictional subagents to life. The scheme culminated on June 6, 1944, when Garbo convinced the Germans that the Allied forces approaching Normandy were just a feint - the real invasion would come at Calais.
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Good story, writing overly dramatic
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The Arsenal of Democracy
- FDR, Detroit, and an Epic Quest to Arm an America at War
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- Narrated by: Peter Berkrot
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The Arsenal of Democracy tells the incredible story of how Detroit answered the call, centering on Henry Ford and his tortured son Edsel, who, when asked if they could deliver 50,000 airplanes, made an outrageous claim: Ford Motor Company would erect a plant that could yield a “bomber an hour”. Critics scoffed: Ford didn’t make planes; they made simple, affordable cars. But bucking his father’s resistance, Edsel charged ahead.
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Misleading title
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From the earliest days of his dictatorship, Saddam Hussein had vowed to destroy Israel. So, when France sold Iraq a top-of-the-line nuclear reactor in 1975, the Israelis were justifiably concerned, especially when they discovered that Iraqi scientists had already formulated a secret program to extract weapon-grade plutonium from the reactor, a first critical step in creating an atomic bomb.
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Fascinating detail of a historic strike
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On October 4, 1957, a time of Cold War paranoia, the Soviet Union secretly launched the Earth's first artificial moon. No bigger than a basketball, the tiny satellite was powered by a car battery. Yet, for all its simplicity, Sputnik stunned the world.
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awesome
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The Main Enemy
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- Narrated by: Christopher Lane
- Length: 19 hrs and 48 mins
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A landmark collaboration between a thirty-year veteran of the CIA and a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, The Main Enemy is the inside story of the CIA-KGB spy wars, told through the actions of the men who fought them. Based on hundreds of interviews with operatives from both sides, The Main Enemy puts us inside the heads of CIA officers as they dodge surveillance and walk into violent ambushes in Moscow. This is the story of the generation of spies who came of age in the shadow of the Cuban missile crisis and rose to run the CIA and KGB in the last days of the Cold War.
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A masterpiece of espionage history
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By: Milton Bearden, and others
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The Great Leader and the Fighter Pilot
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In The Great Leader and the Fighter Pilot, New York Times best-selling author Blaine Harden tells the riveting story of how Kim Il Sung grabbed power and plunged his country into war against the United States while the youngest fighter pilot in his air force was playing a high-risk game of deception - and escape.
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Great story
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It is the most famous military installation in the world. And it doesn't exist. Located a mere s75 miles outside of Las Vegas in Nevada's desert, the base has never been acknowledged by the US government - but Area 51 has captivated imaginations for decades. Annie Jacobsen had exclusive access to 19 men who served the base proudly and secretly for decades and are now aged 75-92, and unprecedented access to 55 additional military and intelligence personnel, scientists, pilots, and engineers linked to the secret base, 32 of whom lived and worked there for extended periods.
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Disappointing
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By: Annie Jacobsen
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Gordon Corera uses declassified documents and extensive original research to tell the story of the Operation Columba and the Secret Pigeon Service for the first time. A tale of wartime espionage, bitter rivalries, extraordinary courage, astonishing betrayal, harrowing tragedy, and a quirky, quarrelsome band of spy masters and their special mission, Operation Columba opens a fascinating new chapter in the annals of World War II. It is ultimately, the story of how, in one of the darkest and most dangerous times in history, under threat of death, people bravely chose to resist.
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Belgium Pigeon
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From the authors of the best-selling The Finest Hours comes the riveting, deeply human story of President John F. Kennedy and two U-2 pilots, Rudy Anderson and Chuck Maultsby, who risked their lives to save America during the Cuban Missile Crisis. During the ominous two weeks of the Cold War's terrifying peak, two things saved humanity: the strategic wisdom of John F. Kennedy and the U-2 aerial spy program. On October 27, 1962, Kennedy, strained from back pain, sleeplessness, and days of impossible tension, was briefed about a missing spy plane.
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Narrator’s mispronunciations detracted from the story
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Shadow Warriors of World War II
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They were told that the only crime they must never commit was to be caught. Women of enormous cunning and strength of will, the Shadow Warriors' stories have remained largely untold - until now. In a dramatic tale of espionage and conspiracy in World War II, Shadow Warriors of World War II unveils the history of the courageous women who volunteered to work behind enemy lines.
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Excellent telling of a story of women's strength, courage and intelligence
- By Ralph's mother on 02-24-17
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Double Ace
- The Life of Robert Lee Scott Jr., Pilot, Hero, and Teller of Tall Tales
- By: Robert Coram
- Narrated by: Barry Press
- Length: 12 hrs and 23 mins
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Robert Lee Scott was larger than life. A decorated Eagle Scout who barely graduated from high school, the young man from Macon, Georgia, with an oversize personality used dogged determination to achieve his childhood dream of becoming a famed fighter pilot. First capturing national attention during World War II, Scott, a West Point graduate, flew missions in China alongside the legendary "Flying Tigers", where his reckless courage and victories against the enemy made headlines.
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Tiger Fan
- By Robert M. on 12-23-17
By: Robert Coram
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The Brilliant Disaster
- JFK, Castro, and America's Doomed Invasion of Cuba
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The U.S.-backed military invasion of Cuba in 1961 remains one of the most ill-fated blunders in American history, with echoes of the event reverberating even today. Despite the Kennedy administration’s initial public insistence that the United States had nothing to do with the invasion, it soon became clear that the complex operation had been planned and approved by the best and brightest minds at the highest reaches of Washington, including the Joint Chiefs of Staff and President John F. Kennedy himself.
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US Government Perspective
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Operation Whisper
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- By: Barnes Carr
- Narrated by: John Pruden
- Length: 11 hrs and 17 mins
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In Operation Whisper, Barnes Carr tells the true story of the most effective Soviet spy couple in America, a pair who vanished under the FBI's nose only to turn up posing as rare book dealers in London, where they continued their atomic spying. The Cohens were talented, dedicated, worldly spies - an urbane, jet-set couple loyal to their service and their friends. Most people they met seemed to think they represented the best of America. The Soviets certainly thought so.
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Too many facts details
- By Rebecca C. Browne on 10-02-17
By: Barnes Carr
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What listeners say about Bridge of Spies
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Matthew
- 08-18-16
Very Solid and Captivating
The Good –
Well I know that the movie is out and I intentionally avoided it until I finished this. I actually got this book because of my previous read The Billion Dollar Spy. Bridge of Spies surpassed that and I am very glad I listened to it before seeing the movie. This book was good from the first word to the last. While I would not call this a great book it did as much as it could with the particular subject matter. This is a first rate book!
The Bad -
Not one thing.
The Narration -
Jonathan Keeble; Wow. Phenomenal narration! Even if the book were just mediocre I'd listen again just because the narration was so good.
The Overall -
If you like spy novels, especially true stories, get this one in your library. If you hate spy novels get this anyway. Yes, it's that good. It will get a second listen in a few years I'm sure.
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2 people found this helpful
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- Meeno
- 10-26-15
Fabulous Cold War History that reads like a first rate novel
A incisive look at one of the great fulcrum moments of the post WWII Century; the Cold War in the balance, it tipped the way it did and brought in the ICBM race and Kennedy's Camelot and the moon shots and decades of proxy wars and the eventual bankrupting of the USSR (and soon historians will add: the move of the mighty America to debtor nation notoriety.) And so much of it hinged on the events surrounding the ill fated May Day flight of Power's Icarian U2. Eisenhower had approved only one more flight. He was gunning for detente as hard as Kruschev was and neither could show their hand, the Paris Peace talks were around the corner. But their hopes for peace and disarmament went down in the same fiery flames as that U2 that fell from 13 miles up. Spielberg's movie of the book is gripping and ultimately very human, as all his movies are, but it touches on only about two and half chapters of this tour de force book that brings you through such a crucial moment mid-century, a defining place in time that marked the ashen end of the corps that was the antique world left in the twentieth century and ushered in all that was Mylar and Velcro and hydrogen bomb in the coming Space Age.
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6 people found this helpful
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- Jarrod Morago
- 10-01-15
Loved it!
Great story and loved the narration. If you like books about historical events then you'll love this one!
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2 people found this helpful
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Informative and Important Cold War Episode
What made the experience of listening to Bridge of Spies the most enjoyable?
The explanations of how complicated was the exchange of prisoners.
What was the most compelling aspect of this narrative?
The integrity of the lawyer negotiating the swap.
Which scene was your favorite?
Hmm. Good question. The information about the lawyer's subsequent contributions in repatriating Bay of Pigs prisoners. Not a scene, but interesting, new information.
Did you have an extreme reaction to this book? Did it make you laugh or cry?
It reminded me of how scary the Cold War was.
Any additional comments?
A worthwhile, informative, interesting, entertaining audiobook.
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1 person found this helpful
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- Margaret
- 04-02-16
Riveting true history of the Cold War
Author weaves multiple strands of story together. Sometimes requires concentration, but worth the effort. Recommend.
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- Preston Whitney
- 03-20-16
A great listen.
Always amazes me when life is at times better than the best fiction. I truly enjoyed this book. had a few parts of it that repeated several times from a different perspective but aside from that very entertaining.
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- BookReader
- 09-28-15
Bridge of Spies
Any additional comments?
Read by the author and just over eleven hours of listening. William Fisher, Gary Powers, and Frederic Pryor are the focus of Bridge of Spies. Most Americans have at least heard the name Gary Powers. He’s the U2 pilot that was captured by the Soviets and accused of spying. There is even a museum today in Russia with the wreckage of his airplane … repeat: today. Old cold war enmities still exist, huh. Well, the fact is, he really was spying … a truism and embarrassment for the United States at the time. But … our soviet friends were not innocent victims in the spy games, as Nikita Khrushchev wanted the world to buy into his righteous indignation at the time.
The book is not a novel, it is not the thrill ride of a fictional James Bond (Fleming) or Mitch Rapp (Flynn) or Jason Bourne (Ludlum), etc. Bridge of Spies is the more mundane, and equally deadly, truth of spies … American, British, Soviet, and the political leadership behind the espionage … they’re all guilty, spying was (and still is) a truism.
Narration is great. It’s always nice to hear the words of the author as he intended.
Read this book as a prelude to understanding the upcoming movie to be released the fall of 2015 starring Tom Hanks. Who doesn’t like Tom :-).
Enjoy!
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19 people found this helpful
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- Stephen
- 11-12-15
Quite a surprise
What made the experience of listening to Bridge of Spies the most enjoyable?
Having watched the movie I thought it would be the same story. Instead the movie almost starts off at the 85% mark. The book covers in details the workings of Russian spydome and the CIA's involvement in the U2 program. I'm so glad I listened to this to gain a better understanding of what actually occurring.
What was the most compelling aspect of this narrative?
The bungling of the U2 mission and the conspiracy theories surrounding the sabotage of the Paris conference.
Which scene was your favorite?
The court scene for Gary for the mind games played.
If you could give Bridge of Spies a new subtitle, what would it be?
U2 can be a Russian Spy!
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6 people found this helpful
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- Bob E.
- 12-25-15
A Very Interesting Account
Would you consider the audio edition of Bridge of Spies to be better than the print version?
Yes. The narrator was very good
Any additional comments?
A lot of historical information was listed which was ok since I lived during that period & served in the military. It could be distracting to someone else, tho.
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- James
- 10-20-15
Good and interesting book, but dry at times
I enjoyed the book and definitely enjoyed the additional insights into the history of the period.
At times the narrative dragged a bit, but it was quite interesting overall.
The performance was pretty good, but his russian pronunciation was poor at times. I cringed every time he tried (and failed) to pronounce Tyuratam. It is pronounced Tur (like pure)-a-tom NOT Tie-uri-tam.
I just saw the movie today. It made the story more riveting, but focused on only a portion of the story.
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5 people found this helpful