Agent ZigZag
A True Story of Nazi Espionage, Love
and Betrayal
By Ben MacIntyre
Do you like spy thrillers?
Well, this one is the real thing.
This is the true accounting of the self-serving, but also heroic
adventures of Eddie Chapman as a double agent during World War II. He was a British citizen, with an interesting
personal history. Despite his checkered
past, he volunteered for the British spy service. With his criminal record, his offer was not
taken up by MI5 at that time. Then he
turned traitor, volunteering to spy for the Nazi’s to save himself. But then he turned again and ended up as a
double agent for the British. Chapman
would say that it was always his intent to work for the British and that may
be, or he may have seized an opportunity that came his way as he did so often
in his life. His story, and reading
about his adventures is enthralling.
You’ll learn a lot about the people and the workings of the
Nazi secret service. Chapman was one of
the first initiates in the Nazi’s ambitions to turn allies’ citizens into their
own spies. You’ll read about Chapman’s
training, and about secrets he discovered for the British during his private
training by the Nazi’s in France. When Chapman
was deemed ready and fully tested regarding his loyalties, he was dangerously
parachuted back to Britain on a mission for the Nazi’s.
Then you get to read about Chapman immediately turning
himself over to service as a double agent for MI5, Britain’s secret service,
who gave him the code name ZigZag.
You’ll get to meet the people he worked with there, including the man
that Ian Fleming modeled “Q” after in the James Bond books. The book details how Chapman and his MI5 handlers
dangerously but successfully fooled the Nazi’s.
Chapman is a charming and likable personality, with a very
checkered and criminal personal life before becoming a double agent spy. He loves deeply and often, and you’ll read
all about the fascinating and brave women who are attracted to him, and one who
spies with him.
Ben MacIntyre is a British author, historian, and columnist
for The Times newspaper. He has fully
researched this topic, including exhaustive numbers of confidential files
finally released by the British government in 2002, and also videotaped
recollections by Chapman himself before he died in 1997, and interviews with
the surrounding characters in Chapman’s life from several countries.
This book is a most enjoyable way to understand the inside
story of a very important time in history.
The author treats the facts objectively, but at the same time tells the
story in an engaging way that exposes the humanity behind the treachery, the
heroics, and the ambitions.
Thereby hangs a tale . . .
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