What is The CIA Book Club: The Best-Kept Secret
of the Cold War by Charlie English about?
A Book of the Year in the Daily Telegraph and Economist
'This book reads like a spy novel' FINANICAL
TIMES
'Entertaining and vivid' OBSERVER
'Reads like a thriller' THE SUN
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The astonishing story of the ten million books that were
smuggled across the Iron Curtain during the Cold War.
For almost five decades after the Second World War, Europe
was divided by the longest and most heavily guarded border on earth. The Iron
Curtain, a near-impenetrable barrier of wire and wall, tank traps, minefields,
watchtowers and men with dogs, stretched for 4,300 miles from the Arctic to the
Black Sea. No physical combat would take place along this frontier: the risk of
nuclear annihilation was too high for that. Instead, the conflict would be
fought in the psychological sphere. It was a battle for hearts, minds and
intellects.
No one understood this more clearly than George Minden, the
head of a covert intelligence operation known as the ‘CIA books programme’,
which aimed to win the Cold War with literature.
From its Manhattan headquarters, Minden’s global CIA ‘book
club’ would infiltrate millions of banned titles into the Eastern Bloc, written
by a vast and eclectic list of authors, including Hannah Arendt and Aleksandr
Solzhenitsyn, George Orwell and Agatha Christie. Volumes were smuggled on
trucks and aboard yachts, dropped from balloons, and hidden in the luggage of
hundreds of thousands of individual travellers. Once inside Soviet bloc, each
book would circulate secretly among dozens of like-minded readers, quietly
turning them into dissidents. Latterly, underground print shops began to
reproduce the books, too. By the late 1980s, illicit literature in Poland was
so pervasive that the system of communist censorship broke down, and the Iron
Curtain soon followed.
Charlie English tells this true story of spycraft, smuggling
and secret printing operations for the first time, highlighting the work of a
handful of extraordinary people who risked their lives to stand up to the
intellectual strait-jacket Stalin created. People like Miroslaw Chojecki, an
underground Polish publisher who endured beatings, force-feeding and exile in
service of this mission. And Minden, the CIA’s mastermind, who didn’t waver in
his belief that truth, culture, and diversity of thought could help free the
‘captive nations’ of Eastern Europe. This is a story about the power of the
printed word as a means of resistance and liberation. Books, it shows, can set
you free.