Call me naive, but when I was a girl - watching James Bond movies and devouring Harriet the Spy - all I wanted was to grow up to be a spy. Unlike most kids, I didn't lose my secret-agent aspirations when I became an adult. So as a bright-eyed, idealistic college grad, I sent my resume to the CIA. My dad - who I secretly suspected was a spy himself - told me I wasn't their type. That only made me more determined.
Getting into the CIA was a story in itself. I peed in more cups than you could imagine, and was nearly condemned as a sexual deviant by the staff psychologist. I passed a lie-detector test in which a previous applicant allegedly admitted that he'd dismembered his wife and buried her in the basement. Meanwhile, my roommates were getting freaked out by government background investigators lurking around, asking questions about my past.
Finally I made it: I was in training to be a CIA case officer. A spy. They taught me to crash cars into barriers at sixty miles per hour. Jump out of airplanes with cargo attached to my body. Survive interrogation, travel in alias, lose a tail.
One thing they didn't teach us was how to date a guy while lying to him about what you do for a living, where you live, and your entire identity. That I had to figure out for myself.
But I passed it all (except the dating part) with flying colors, much to my father's amazement. Then I was posted overseas. And that's when the real fun began...and when I began to truly understand that being a spy was nothing at all like I'd expected.
In Lindsay Moran's Blowing My Cover: My Life as a CIA Spy, the author comes across is an amusingly candid cross between Bridget Jones and James Bond, with a little Gloria Steinem thrown in to remind readers of the inherent sexism that runs rampant both in the US government and abroad. Moran, a few years out of Harvard and fresh from a Fulbright scholarship in Bulgaria, decides to follow her childhood dream of becoming and spy and, after a grueling interview process that involves several polygraphs and an abandoned foreign boyfriend, goes to work for the CIA. What follows is a surprisingly honest behind-the-scenes look at what it takes to become a real-life CIA agent, signal-sites and all.
Yet more than an insider's guide to the life and times of an undercover agent, Blowing My Cover is a story about a highly educated, obviously intelligent yet occasionally insecure young woman trying to figure out what she wants to do with her life, and who she wants to have beside her. As we follow Moran to the "Farm", a six-month training camp where new recruits are forced into alarmingly real POW situations and asked to perform death-defying car chases reminiscent of old Dukes of Hazard episodes, we also witness her extreme loneliness at being cut off from her friends and family and her fear that she'll never meet "the one" and settle down. One of the most poignant scenes happens early on in Moran's training, when she meets up with some friends in New York at a party and realizes she can't even tell her closest confidents what she does for a living.
For anyone who's ever wondered what it really means to be a CIA agent, Moran's tale is a worthwhile read. Better yet, for anyone who's ever wondered what she wants to be when she grows up (even at age 30), Blowing My Cover is an ultimately hopeful story of possibilities.
--Gisele Toueg
If Hollywood decided to match Bridget Jones with MI6, the result might look a lot like Moran's memoir of her five years with the CIA. She went in young and idealistic; she left matured and disillusioned, but engaged to a wonderful guy (whose work had nothing to do with spying). Moran, a former writing teacher who, one imagines, is a much more entertaining writer than your average CIA bureaucrat, maintains a sense of humor about her own dashed expectations while raising serious questions about an organizational culture that encouraged operatives to prey on informants' emotional and financial vulnerabilities and, ultimately, kept the agency from predicting and preventing the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. The volume has no index.
When Harvard grad Moran entered CIA training in her late 20s, her expectations had more to do with Harriet the Spy and James Bond than with drudge work or service; the reality, as she represents it in this memoir of her training and case work, was a sexist environment filled with career-oriented, shallow people, "an elaborate game for men who'd never really grown up." Beginning in 1998 as a case officer in Macedonia, Moran finds the work dull and admittedly achieves little of note in her brief career; smooth writing and wit regarding the humdrum mechanics of spookdom—from having her alias's credit card rejected for nonpayment to the thousands of little lies she must invent and remember—carry the book. Her apprehension about preying on people from cash-poor economies with bribes is easily overcome; a boyfriend in Bulgaria helps ease her loneliness. During the events of 9/11 neither she nor her field boss have any idea what is going on ("We worked for the CIA for chrissake. Shouldn't we have known?"). Though Moran is a likable spy, the wait for significant insights or breakthroughs goes mostly unrewarded for writer and reader alike. Expressing disillusionment with the U.S. invasion of Iraq, frustration with excessive bureaucracy and desire for a more fulfilling personal life, Moran simply quits one day.
Like many of us, Lindsay Moran harbored espionage fantasies from a young age, nourished by James Bond films depicting dangerous assignments in exotic lands, slinky black catsuits and intriguing foreign liaisons. Unlike most of us, she chose to realize her spy-girl daydreams by joining the CIA. In Blowing My Cover, she lifts the lid on her cloak-and-dagger adventures from 1998 to 2003, when she underwent an education in espionage and then put her new skills to work in Macedonia. She discovered just how disenchanting the realities of the spying life are for the aspiring modern Bond girl. Forget about catsuits and karate chops; think business suits and report-writing. Above all, have no illusions that the CIA offers a smart young woman, ready to serve her country, anything but distinctly bad dating options. Indeed, if Moran's example is anything to go by, the life of a spy girl is far less Pussy Galore and much more Bridget Jones.
Certainly now is the time for a smart exposé about "real" life inside the CIA. Since Sept. 11, revelations about the agency's inability to connect al Qaeda-related dots that were there, or counter its leadership's slam-dunk certainty about an Iraqi doomsday arsenal that wasn't, have shone a spotlight on the CIA and the impact of its work on policymaking. Yet we have gained little sense of the CIA's human face -- of what intelligence officers actually do, who they are and what makes them tick.
Blowing My Cover only partly fulfills this need. Moran provides an unusually candid glimpse into the operational training and culture of America's clandestine services -- rare in itself, and even more so from a female perspective. But this glimpse is intensely personal and takes place within the familiar story of a young woman's journey toward emotional fulfillment. We learn a good deal about the ins and outs of spy work, but we learn more about Moran herself, her own misgivings about the spying profession and, above all, her unhappy love life.
Take, for example, Moran's schooling at "The Farm," the CIA's super-secret training facility for new recruits. She endured courses in defensive driving ("Crash and Burn"), assembling explosives, handling weapons, hand-to-hand combat, parachuting, maritime skills and a final, grueling exercise in which the trainees were captured, held prisoner and interrogated for days. Her experiences offer a revealing account of the most extreme physical, mental and emotional demands that might be required of a CIA case officer.
But while Moran sometimes found real satisfaction in meeting these challenges, she spent more time worrying about her crumbling relationships and seemingly impending spinsterhood. On a training exercise, driving blindfolded through the woods, she asked herself, "What the hell am I doing with my life? At some point, didn't I just want to find a nice guy and settle down?" But things did not go well with Sasho, the Bulgarian rock-climber, and her liaisons with Chris, the tapas chef, and Venci, the bingo hall security guard, also floundered. Being required by her employers to lie to friends and family about her espionage activities took an emotional toll on her, and she felt increasingly insular and alone. Moran's mother, unable to deny or confirm a neighbor's speculation that her daughter was a high-end hooker, was forced to comment, "How would I know? I'm only her mother."
Regrettably, the workplace offered slim pickings. She was distinctly unimpressed with CIA men, who, by contrast, seemed to be having a good deal of fun. She recounts how the head of the clandestine service, for example, was once discovered in flagrante delicto in a steamed-up car in the CIA's parking garage. (She writes that officers noticed unusual activity on the security cameras, thought he was having a seizure and rushed to his aid.) That the CIA turned a blind eye to such behavior did not appear to concern Moran as much as the fact that "personally, I could not have been less romantically intrigued by anyone even associated with work."
Readers will be relieved to hear that there is a happy ending to Moran's story. Yet her disillusionment with the spying life is so self-evident throughout Blowing My Cover that one can't help but wonder why she wanted to stick it out in the first place. "I wasn't naive enough to think that the life of a CIA agent was all Hollywood glamour," she writes, "but I was pretty sure I'd be good at it." What she seems to have neglected to think about, however, was whether the CIA would be good for her. Even for spy girls, it seems, a good man is hard to find.
Reviewed by Alexis K. Albion
Fresh out of Harvard with a head full of memories of the Harriet the Spy series, Moran approached the CIA about becoming a spy. But after five years of isolation from regular life and mounting disappointment in the agency's effectiveness--especially after 9/11--Moran left. In this alternately amusing and disturbing memoir, she recalls the recruitment process, including lie-detector tests and psychological screening; the grueling training at the Farm; and the sexist attitudes of male instructors and fellow recruits. Among her classmates were a former Green Beret and a fellow Harvard grad. Finally posted to Macedonia, Moran is charged with recruiting spies, and she has to use all her training and smarts to keep from being killed. Tired of the lying and the subterfuge and the failure of the CIA to predict or prevent the terrorist attacks of 9/11, Moran--on leave for her brother's wedding--meets a man who pulls her back into the mainstream. Fans of the spy show Alias will enjoy this insider look at a spy agency that has lost its luster.
Vanessa Bush
Blowing My Cover offers an inside look at America’s recent failures of intelligence, the CIA, and its tragic missteps in the Iraq war. Moran, a disenchanted CIA case officer between 1998 and 2003, relates her (mis)adventures with wit and intelligence-she’s an unglamorous Bond Girl with Bridget Jones’s sensibilities. Most critics embraced Moran’s personal approach-her honest, humorous descriptions of grueling training (defensive driving, assembling explosives, handling weapons) and journey toward emotional fulfillment. Who’s a young CIA agent to date, anyway? A few reviewers thought that Moran shirked some larger issues, like her espionage posting in Macedonia, but this may be a matter of editing. In the end, Moran makes a persuasive case to revamp American intelligence.
Lindsay Moran is a freelance writer whose articles have appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, and USA Today. From 1998 to 2003, she worked as a case officer for the CIA.
length: (cm)20.1 width:(cm)14.1
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这本传记的叙事节奏把握得极佳,作者似乎深谙如何在高潮和低谷之间穿梭,让读者始终保持一种既紧张又好奇的状态。他笔下的世界,充满了迷雾和未解之谜,即便是那些看似平淡的日常片段,也仿佛潜藏着某种不为人知的深意。我尤其欣赏他对于情感描绘的克制与精准,没有过多的煽情,却能在细微之处将身处那种高压环境下的精神世界刻画得入木三分。那种时刻需要戴着面具生活,与真实自我渐行渐远的孤独感,透过文字的缝隙渗透出来,令人唏嘘。每一次任务的部署、每一个意外的转折,都处理得像是精心编排的棋局,每一步都似乎在为最终的布局积蓄力量。读起来完全不像是在阅读一部回忆录,更像是在沉浸式体验一部扣人心弦的谍战小说,只是你知道,那份真实感,远比任何虚构作品都要来得沉重和震撼。这本书的结构非常巧妙,它不是简单地按时间线推进,而是通过穿插不同的记忆碎片和对当前处境的反思,构建出一个立体的人物形象。
评分坦白说,这本书的阅读体验是相当费脑子的,它要求读者必须全神贯注,因为任何一个疏忽都可能让你错过作者埋下的关键线索。作者似乎故意挑战读者的耐心和智力,他不会轻易给出明确的答案,而是更倾向于呈现一个充满灰色地带的现实。这种不确定性,正是这部作品最吸引人的地方。它打破了传统英雄主义叙事中“非黑即白”的刻板印象,将间谍工作描绘成一种永恒的道德困境。你会忍不住停下来,思考如果自己处于他的位置,会做出何种选择。书中的某些段落,关于忠诚的定义和背叛的代价,读来令人心悸,它探讨的不是对国家的忠诚,而是对某种信念、某种自我认同的坚守。这种对“自我”的解构与重塑过程,是全书最具有哲学深度的部分。那些关于身份认同的挣扎,即便脱离了间谍这个光环,对于任何在现代社会中努力寻找自己位置的人来说,都具有强烈的共鸣。
评分这本书的语言风格非常独特,带着一种老派的、经过时间打磨的质感,但同时又充满了现代特工行动中那种冰冷而高效的专业术语。你会发现,作者在描述那些极其危险的场景时,用词是异常冷静和客观的,仿佛在记录一份技术报告,但正是这种反差,让紧张感呈几何级数上升。这种疏离感,正是他多年训练成果的体现,对外人来说,那或许是冷酷,但对于理解他的人来说,那是生存的本能。我特别注意到作者在描述某些文化冲突和国际政治博弈时的深刻洞察力,这绝非一个普通人能够轻易获得的视角。他没有陷入对意识形态的空洞说教,而是将宏大的叙事融入到微小的、具体的接触场景中,比如一次咖啡馆里的眼神交汇,一次不经意的握手,都可能决定着一个国家的命运。这种“见微知著”的能力,让这本书的价值远远超出了个人回忆录的范畴,它简直是一部关于隐秘外交和权力运作的教科书,只是它的教材是真实的血肉与汗水。
评分这本书给我留下的最深刻印象是其对“高处不胜寒”的细致捕捉。作者在描述那些看似光鲜亮丽、掌握着巨大权力的时刻时,笔触却是向内收缩的,聚焦于那种与世界隔绝的孤独感。他描绘的“圈子”是如此封闭,以至于任何信任都可能成为致命的陷阱。这种生存状态迫使人建立起一道厚厚的心理屏障,阻挡了所有真挚情感的流入,也阻碍了自我情感的流出。我仿佛能感受到那种常年累月积累下来的、对人性深处的怀疑与不安全感。他谈论起战友、谈论起对手,甚至谈论起自己最亲近的人时,都带着一种审视和分析的目光,这是一种深入骨髓的职业病。这本书不是在歌颂间谍生涯的浪漫,而是在深刻剖析长期处于这种极端环境下,一个人的精神架构会发生怎样的扭曲与重塑,它是一部关于精神生存哲学的案例研究,读完后,对“表象”和“真实”之间的距离有了全新的认知。
评分我必须承认,这本书的某些章节读起来需要极大的毅力,因为它深入探讨了一些非常复杂且不甚光彩的国际政治操作细节,涉及到的机构名称、地理坐标和历史背景知识量巨大。然而,正是这种不加粉饰的详尽,赋予了作品无与伦比的真实感和厚重感。它不是那种轻飘飘的、满足猎奇心理的消遣读物,它更像是一份需要被认真对待的历史文献。作者的叙述中透露出一种历经沧桑后的沉静,他似乎已经和过去的自己达成了某种和解,所以才能如此冷静地回顾那些可能让他万劫不复的时刻。他没有试图为自己的行为辩护,只是客观地陈述“当时我必须这么做”。这种责任感和承担感,是很多当代作品中所缺失的。每一次行动的描写,都充满了对后果的深思熟虑,即便是最冲动的决定,也似乎经过了深层心理机制的驱动,非常耐人寻味。
评分Life of a spy is not that glamorous after all...
评分Life of a spy is not that glamorous after all...
评分Life of a spy is not that glamorous after all...
评分Life of a spy is not that glamorous after all...
评分Life of a spy is not that glamorous after all...
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