Simon and Schuster, 462 pp., $24.95
James J. Angleton was installed as chief of the Central Intelligence Agency's Counterintelligence Staff in 1954. He would run it for the next twenty years for a succession of agency directors whose original admiration for his judgment mounted to sustained awe of his omniscience and then plunged, by no means prematurely, into alarms for his sanity.
Review, 648 words
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