Doubleday, 312 pp., $5.95
Putnam's, 320 pp., $5.95
Ballantine, 192 pp., $.75 (paperback) (paper)
Grove, 262 pp., $5.95
We have recently had a spate, if not a surfeit, of Kim Philby, the Englishman who, for thirty years—eleven of them inside the British Secret Service—spied for Russia and has now gone 'home.' What he did in those years is now generally known. What he is still something of a mystery. Here are three books about him and one by him. All reveal something about the psychology of this celebrated double-agent. Inevitably the last of them, his own book, is the most revealing. I shall therefore deal cursorily with the others and devote most of this review to it, which I find the most interesting of all.
Review, 3307 words
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