Real-Life Spies Pick Their Top 100 Spy Books From Box 88 to The Quiet American


Imagine having access to the personal bookshelves of top intelligence operatives, including CIA, FBI, Mossad, and KGB-trained agents. Well, we did just that and asked them to share their all-time favorite spy books. Get ready to discover the ultimate reading list for anyone who loves the world of espionage and covert operations.

Here are the Top 100 Spy Books both fiction and non-fiction selected by spies, our True Spies team and our SPYSCAPE bookshop - you won't find another list like this anywhere in the world.

SPYSCAPE TOP 50 SPY NOVELS

SPYSCAPE Top 50 Spy Novels

50. Holy Spy & John Shakespeare Tudor Spy series by Rory Clements 

The Tudor Spy series is a window into Elizabethan England through the eyes of John Shakespeare, a private investigator who introduces us to a world of murder, conspiracy, royals, criminals, spies, and his young brother Will Shakespeare. Ex-journalist Rory Clements’ sinister twists and incredible research has introduced a new generation to historical espionage - rightly so. 

49. Where Eagles Dare by Alistair MacLean

Scottish novelist Alistair MacLean is known to readers of neck-snapping spy fiction but some may not be as familiar with his gritty page-turners. MacLean’s When Eagles Dare (1976) follows British commandos on a mission to infiltrate a Gestapo HQ. The book - later a Hollywood movie - was a game-changer for True Spy James Stejskal. As a young man, he watched Clint Eastwood onscreen and decided to jump out of airplanes and work behind enemy lines. Stejskal, who later became a CIA operative, never looked back.

48. Red Widow by Alma Katsu

Red Widow is described as a cross between Killing Eve and Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy but there’s an authenticity that comes only with experience - in Katsu’s case, her decades spent working as a senior analyst at the CIA and NSA. Red Widow involves two CIA officers drawn into a threat involving the Russia Division that may be coming from within. If you enjoy cerebral spy thrillers, this one should be high on your list.

47. Our Woman in Moscow, Beatriz Williams 

Part mystery, part espionage thriller, Beatriz Williams’ Our Woman in Moscow deserves your full attention. Set In London in 1948, Iris Digby disappears with her husband, an American diplomat working abroad. Fast forward four years and Ruth Macallister is on her way to Moscow, desperate to extract her sister from behind the Iron Curtain. 

46. How To Betray Your Country by James Wolff 

James Wolff’s How To Betray Your Country is the sequel to Beside the Syrian Sea and a clever standalone spy novel. Wolff examines the cost of a life spent in the shadows and the inner turmoil of August Drummond, a disgraced spy on the edge of a breakdown. An operation involving an Iranian scientist in Istanbul presents an age-old question: is it better to follow orders or your conscience? 

SPYSCAPE Top 50 Spy Novels

45. Above Suspicion by Helen MacInnes 

A short time after moving to New York, Scottish-American author Helen MacInnes began writing Above Suspicion (1941), a semi-autobiographical tale of honeymooners in Europe who spied on the Nazis. The book mirrored her own life as MacInnes had lived in Europe with her husband, a British MI6 officer. Most of her writing, fueled by her love of international relations and the world of espionage, reached the bestseller lists including The Salzburg Connection (1968).

44. A Loyal Spy by Simon Conway

California-born Simon Conway is a man on a mission. When he’s not writing bestsellers, the ex-British Army officer works with landmine-clearing charity The Halo Trust. His award-winning A Loyal Spy involves issues close to his heart - war and betrayal. The plot revolves around Jonah, who thought he’d murdered his friend Nor ed-Din in the Khyber Pass. Both were groomed for intelligence work. Neither expected to face what might happen in London.

43. A Treachery of Spies by Manda Scott

More WWII spies, double agents, and traitors abound in Manda Scott’s A Treachery of Spies, It begins with the murder of a beautiful elderly woman in France. She’s been killed in a way that indicates the victim may have been a traitor to the French Resistance. The past is buried but it may hold the only clue to solving the mystery.

42. Night Falls On The City: The Lost Masterpiece of Wartime by Sarah Gainham 

It is 1938 in Vienna and a beautiful actress, Julia Homburg, is married to a clever politician named Franz Wedeker who happens to be Jewish. As the Nazi troops enter Austria, citizens begin to disappear. Will Franz be next? Spies mingle in the streets, forcing Franz into hiding. Night Falls on the City is the first of a trilogy written by Rachel Ames, a British novčlist and journalist, who moved to Vienna and wrote under the pen name Sarah Gainham. 

41. The Best of Our Spies by Alex Gerlis

Alex Gerlis, a former BBC journalist and SPYEX consultant, is the author of The Spy Masters espionage books. His first, The Best of Our Spies, is being developed into a television series and involves a Royal Navy Intelligence officer on a mission to discover what exactly his wife was doing during WWII.

SPYSCAPE Top 50 Spy Novels
Sun Tzu’s wrote about spies in The Art of War in the period of 771 to 256 BCE

40. Outbreak by Frank Gardner

BBC security correspondent Frank Gardner trained with the British Army biathlon team and was later an officer. That may explain why Gardner’s runaway bestseller Outbreak reads like a bullet-paced thriller with an espionage twist: British Intelligence is convinced Russia is developing a new generation of bio-weapons but are the Brits looking in the wrong place? 

39. Secret Lovers by Charles McCarry

American writer Charles McCarry worked as an undercover CIA officer so keep a careful eye on his tradecraft tips in Secret Lovers. The story begins with a courier who delivers a manuscript written by a Russian dissident to CIA agent Paul Christopher. Meanwhile, Christopher’s wife decides to have an affair with a film director. Are the two events linked? You’ll need to put the pieces together as Christopher races to identify the leak and even more explosive events.

38. Living Lies by James Lawler

James Lawler, author of the fictional Living Lies about Iran’s covert nuclear weapons program knows the terrain well. Lawler is an ex-CIA expert on WMDs and counterintelligence, but it is his insight into human nature that really sets this novel apart. Both former CIA officer Rolf Mowatt-Larssen and ex-State Department Psychiatrist Kenneth Dekleva listed James Lawler as a favorite author. (Dekleva and Mowatt-Larssen happen to be published themselves - Dekleva wrote The Negotiator’s Cross and Mowatt-Larssen published A State of Mind. There must be something about spying that burnishes storytelling skills.) 

37. Shadow Dancer by Tom Bradby

British journalist Tom Bradby’s compelling novel Shadow Dancer revolves around Colette, whose Irish husband was killed by the British. Her brothers have dedicated their lives to fighting them and Colette herself is arrested in an aborted bombing raid in London. That’s when she must decide her future: Will Colette inform on the Republicans and see her children again? Or will she remain loyal to her political beliefs and remain in prison? Her MI5 handler isn’t sure of her - or even himself.

36. The Alice Network by Kate Quinn 

Kate Quinn, the author of The Alice Network and The Rose Code, sets a high bar for espionage writers. The Alice Network is historical fiction based on the true story of WWI operative Louise de Bettignies who spied on the Germans for the Brits. The Rose Code is equally compelling, involving a royal wedding in Britain and Bletchley Park codebreakers. We’re hard-pressed to recommend just one of Quinn’s books so we’ll leave the decision in your capable hands.

SPYSCAPE Top 50 Spy Novels
SPYSCAPE Top 50 Spy Novels

35. The Contract Man, part of the Alex King Series by A.P. Bateman

MI6 assassin Alex King is a hard man living in a world of enemies and deadly missions but is the real threat coming from within the heart of the intelligence community? There are enemies on all sides in this gripping series. We suggest starting with the first novel - The Contract Man (2015) - where Alex King sets out to silence the most dangerous man you can imagine (until the next novel, of course). 

34. The Company, A Novel of the CIA by Robert Littell

Robert Littell has amassed an impressive body of work on the US-Soviet conflict. If you don’t know where to start, try The Company, A Novel of the CIA, his nostalgic look at the Agency (known as The Company to insiders), a semi-fictional, historic book about a mole hunt and one of the biggest rabbit holes you’ll ever fall into. You can follow up with The Amateur if you find yourself craving more. 

33. The Walk-In by Gary Berntsen

Former CIA officer Doug Patteson recommends The Walk-In, a novel of spy tradecraft and terror written by a former CIA operative and field commander who cornered Osama bin Laden in Afghanistan. Gary Berntsen’s fictional book involves an Iranian intelligence operative who walks into a US Embassy claiming to possess explosive intelligence but can the man be trusted? 

32. The Charm School by Nelson DeMille

The Charm School, another of Patteson’s favorites, revolves around US Air Force Colonel Sam Hollis, a former Vietnam fighter pilot and US Air Force Intelligence officer in Moscow. Hollis begins to investigate a Soviet plan to ‘Americanize’ Russia that could lead to his death.

31. Mitch Rapp by Vince Flynn and later Kyle Mills

Mitch Rapp is a ‘badass’, a CIA agent and counterterrorism operative who will go to great lengths to stop Middle Eastern terrorist attacks on the US. There are more than a dozen novels in the series so you may want to begin with the character’s first appearance in Transfer of Power or - if you’d rather get the order of the storyline - begin with American Assassin (2010). Either way, you’ll be hooked.

SPYSCAPE Top 50 spy books countdown

30. Stephanie Barron series of Jane Austen Mysteries

The Jane Austen Mysteries portrays the heroine as more of a sleuth than a spy, focusing on Austen’s critical-thinking side. The series has a place in the heart of one of our True Spies, SPYEX consultant Gina Bennett, an ex-CIA analyst and author of National Security Mom: “My Austen fanaticism was shared by former colleague and friend, Jennifer Matthews, who was killed in the al-Qaeda attack in Khost, Afghanistan, on December 30, 2009.” Their last conversation involved the Austen mysteries and Gina promised to send Jennifer Book 2 in the series. “The Jane Austen Mysteries will always have a special place in my heart because of this bittersweet memory.”

29. Foul Lady Fortune by Chloe Gong

The first of an espionage duology, Foul Lady Fortune is the story of an assassin named Rosalind - code name: Fortune - who must investigate a murder that may be linked to the Japanese Imperial Army. Rosalind’s task is to identify who is behind the terror plot. To do so, she must go undercover as a wife in 1930s Shanghai. Foul Lady Fortune comes highly recommended by the SPYSCAPE HQ team. 

28. Thirty-Nine Steps by John Buchan

The 1st Baron of Tweedsmuir wrote the pre-WWI thriller The Thirty-Nine Steps introducing the character Richard Hannay - a Canadian caught up in a spy ring and a murder - who reappears in Greenmantle and Mr. Standfast. John Buchan was attached to the British Army's General HQ Intelligence Section before being sent to Canada as Governor-General where he stayed until his death in 1940. His much-loved character, Richard Hannay, outlived Buchan, appearing in Sick Heart River (aka Mountain Meadow), in 1941. 

27. Gorky Park by Martin Cruz Smith

American novelist Martin Cruz Smith is known for his nine-novel series on Russian investigator Arkady Renko introduced in Gorky Park (1981). We first meet Arkady, chief investigator for the Moscow militsiya, on a case involving three corpses found in an amusement park. Arkady's superior soon introduces him to an American millionaire who may be a KGB informant, but things are just starting to heat up.

26. The Chief Gabriel Allon series by Daniel Silva

Gabriel Allon is center stage in Daniel Silva's espionage series involving an Israeli intelligence unit known as 'the Office' (although not specified as Mossad). Allon was plucked from civilian life to join Operation Wrath of God, a mission to kill those responsible for murdering Israeli athletes at the Munich Olympics. Gripping and gut-wrench in equal measure.

SPYSCAPE Top 50 spy novels countdown
SPYSCAPE has the biggest selection of spy book in New York City in addition to our online shop

25. American Spy by Lauren Wilkinson

Wilkinson’s main character Marie has a lot of baggage and Wilkinson wanted to ensure readers of American Spy knew exactly why Marie made bad choices before setting off for an adventure in Africa. “I also felt that, hey, I'm doing something that hasn't been done a whole lot before. My main character is a black female spy, essentially a black CIA officer,” Wilkinson told The Spying Game. “Why not just go as far as I can with the new stuff because who knows if I'll ever get another shot at writing a book? They might get the giant hook and pull me off the stage.” 

24. MIKE4 series by J.R. Seeger

Author J.R. Seeger, an ex-CIA division chief and paratrooper, writes hard-edged spy novels including the MIKE4 series involving Sue O’Connell. The Special Operations Force surveillance specialist is part of a team that ‘finds and fixes’ terrorists in place so assault teams can ‘finish’ the target. Seeger’s books are highly recommended by SPYEX consultant Kenneth Dekleva for their ‘realism and topicality’. 

23. I Am Pilgrim by Terry Hayes

“Not just prescient but a stunning debut novel from the man who wrote the screenplay for Mad Max 2. One incredible book and then gone, with a sequel promised and never delivered,” according to the SPYSCAPE team. If you haven’t read Hayes’ novel, where have you been? Pilgrim follows a former US intelligence agent and author known as the ‘Rider of the Blue’. He gets mixed up with a woman who uses his book to commit untraceable murders in the aftermath of 9/11.

22. The Matchmaker by Paul Vidich 

Another of Dekleva’s favorites is American writer Paul Vidich, praised for his Cold War thrillers and ‘noir to the bone’ spy stories. The Matchmaker focuses on an American translator targeted by the East German Stasi who must confront the truth behind her German husband's mysterious disappearance. Follow up with The Honorable Man, a novel that burrows into the heart of a CIA mole hunt.

21. Need to Know by Karen Cleveland

“My favorite spy novel is Need to Know by my former CIA colleague Karen Cleveland,” ex-CIA officer Christina Hillsberg said. “She's my favorite spy author because of the strong female spy characters she creates that remind me of the talented women I worked with at the CIA.”

SPYSCAPE TOP 50 Non Fiction
SPYSCAPE top 50 spy books countdown
Did you know SPYSCAPE also has an online book shop?

20. The Berlin Exchange by Joseph Kanon

US author Joseph Kanon uses a Cold War spy swap as a vehicle for The Berlin Exchange. A captured American who spied for the KGB is swapped by the British and returns to East Berlin. But who arranged his release - the KGB? - and what do they want in exchange? We rank Kanon in the Top 20 although we wouldn’t argue with some who made a persuasive case to elevate him to the Top 10.

19. The Hunt for Red October by Tom Clancy 

When the US Naval Institute Press published its first fictional work - The Hunt for Red October (1984) - they struck gold. Tom Clancy’s debut novel about the adventures of Soviet sub-captain Marko Aleksandrovich Ramius and CIA analyst Jack Ryan remains its most successful title. If you’re a fan of the TV series, the Sean Connery movie - and yes, even the video, console, and board games - you’ll want to know where the legacy began. 

18. Red Sparrow by Jason Matthews

A beautiful Russian agent trained in pleasure targets a vulnerable CIA operative to uncover a mole at the heart of the Russian intelligence service. It’s a honeypot plot dreamed up by Jason Matthews, the CIA operative-turned-novelist behind the Red Sparrow spy trilogy. So, is there a real-life sparrow school? Da & nyet. Matthews told CNBC that Red Sparrow is based on what intelligence operatives believe ‘used to be’ a 'school' run by Soviet Russia. No matter. Ex-CIA officer and SPYEX consultant Doug Patteson ranks it on his list of top books to recommend. 

17. The Journeyman Tailor by Gerald Seymour

The Journeyman Tailor by Gerald Seymour delves into the strange relationship that exists between agent handler and agent. According to ex-CIA division chief of operations J.R. Seeger: “It is a realistic portrayal of the relationship which is sometimes positive for both and sometimes only productive for one of the two.” The novel also delves into the question of whether the end justifies the means.

16. Under the Midnight Sun by Keigo Higashino

One of Anthony Horowitz’s favorite authors, Keigo Higashino spins a dark mystery with a twist of industrial espionage in Under the Midnight Sun. It is 1973 when Yosuke Kirihara, an Osaka pawnbroker, is found stabbed to death in an abandoned building. The police finger a few suspects before the novel takes a dramatic turn. We soon find ourselves in the company of Yakuza figures from Japan’s criminal underworld.

SPYSCAPE TOP 50 SPY NOVELS
SPYSCAPE Top 50 spy books

15. Knight Without Armour by James Hilton

Published in the US as Without Armour, Hilton’s thriller was first sold in 1933 and stands the test of time. The plot centers around a British secret agent in Russia who rescues the daughter of a Tsarist minister from a group of Bolshevik revolutionaries. The book comes recommended by ex-CIA officer Christopher Turner, author of The Cassia Spy Ring in WWII Austria.

14. The Secret Agent by Joseph Conrad

Polish-British author Joseph Conrad published his terrorist spy book in 1907 - more than a century later it would become one of the world’s most-cited books in the weeks after 9/11. The Secret Agent deals with anarchism, espionage, terrorism, and exploitation of the vulnerable. The main relationship is between Verloc - a spy for an unnamed foreign country who gets involved in an anarchist plot - and his brother-in-law who has an intellectual disability. 

13. Damascus Station: A Novel by David McCloskey

Written by former CIA case officer David McCloskey, Damascus Station deals with a fictional case officer - Sam Joseph - who is sent to Paris to recruit a Syrian Palace official and soon falls for her, leading to danger in Damascus. Marc Polymeropoulos, author of Clarity in Crisis and a CIA counterterrorism expert, cites Damascus Station as one of his two favorite books (the other is Agents of Innocence below): “Both books/authors captured the essence of CIA espionage operations in the Middle East, and most importantly, the relationship between a case officer and their agent.”

12. Bamboo and Blood by James Church

James Church, the pen name of an author described as “a former Western intelligence officer with decades of experience in Asia”, is known for his ‘Inspector O’ detective novels which detail Korean society. Church is also the author of Bamboo and Blood, a Cold War spy story involving a North Korean diplomat in Pakistan who dies under suspicious circumstances, recommended by author Kenneth Dekleva.

11. Agents of Innocence and other works by David Ignatius

Agents of Innocence revolves around the Beirut CIA station in the Cold War and is a fictional account of the CIA’s recruitment of Jamal Ramlawi, a high-ranking official of Al Fatah. It is also an analysis of Middle Eastern politics by Ignatius, a Washington Post journalist. The novel explores Lebanon's Palestinian, Christian, and Shiite quarters, and Israel's Mossad, through the lens of fiction. In addition to getting Marc Polymeropoulos’ vote, Dekleva also recommended Agents of Innocence.

SPYSCAPE Top 50 Spy Novels

10. Slow Horses and other works by Mick Herron

Some readers will want to see Mick Herron higher on the list - particularly fans of the series Slow Horses - but competition for real estate is fierce in the upper tier of the SPYSCAPE Top Spy Novels. Slow Horses is set in Slough House, a purgatory for washed-up MI5 officers who bide their time until they quit or prove they can do more than jam the photocopier. When a man is abducted, the slow horses see an opportunity to redeem themselves - even if the ‘victim’ isn’t who he seems.

9. The Sympathizer by Viet Thanh Nguyen

Don’t read The Sympathizer because it is a Pulitzer-winning book. Read it because Viet Thanh Nguyen’s debut is an elegant and romantic novel about the legacy of the Vietnam War and a man whose political beliefs clash with his loyalties. The setting is Saigon in 1975 and the last flights are about to leave the country. The lucky depart but they are unaware that a spy is in their midst, traveling with them to Los Angeles where their movements will be reported to the Viet Cong. 

8. Box 88 and other works by Charles Cumming

Charles Cumming is not an MI6 officer. Repeat: Not MI6. Even though the Scottish author may tell you how, in 1995, he was approached by the British Secret Intelligence Service, Cumming wasn’t recruited. Or he might tell you he was approached and then targeted in a honey trap. Or that he went through MI6 training but failed at the last hurdle. We’re not sure which version of the ‘not MI6’ story Cumming is telling these days but we do know that Box 88 deserves its spot in eighth place. It’s about a secret agent who comes of age. And he’s not MI6, okay?

7. The Ipcress File by Len Deighton

You can almost hear the theme music and see Harry Palmer (Michael Caine) smirk over his freshly ground morning coffee as you taste The Ipcress File. The book - and later the movie - are modern classics about a kidnapped scientist but they’re much more than spy stories. They’re a comment about Britain’s class system and the self-confidence of a spy from the streets who wants to show his public school bosses how the game is really played. And once you’ve fallen in love with Palmer, author Len Deighton has cooked up the best meal you’ll ever have in your life.

6. Night Soldiers and other novels by Alan Furst

“Alan Furst is the best in the business,” says SPYEX consultant Jeff Miller, ex-US Army Special Forces and co-author of Vagabonds in the Heart of Darkness. “His novels almost exclusively take place in Europe during the period between the two world wars and are all excellent both in plot and in historical accuracy.” One standout is Night Soldiers and another is one of Jeff’s personal favorites, Mission to Paris, which describes how the Nazis in the 1930s used money, soft power, and coercion to ‘soften up’ France and weaken their resolve in the upcoming war. Miller isn’t the only Furst fan. Ex-CIA officer Patteson also recommends Night Soldiers.

SPYSCAPE Top 50 spy books countdown

5. A Coffin for Dimitrios by Eric Ambler

Tyler Maroney, an expert on corporate intelligence and author of The Modern Detective, is one of several readers of the genre to select Ambler as a favorite author, in particular he enjoyed A Coffin for Dimitrios. “It has it all and inspired all that came later: international intrigue, plot twists, well-sketched characters, and tradecraft. Graham Greene and John LeCarre stand on Ambler’s shoulders.”

4. Ashenden by Somerset Maugham

“It was not till the beginning of September that Ashenden, a writer by profession, who had been abroad at the outbreak of the war, managed to get back to England. He chanced soon after his arrival to go to a party and was there introduced to a middle-aged Colonel whose name he did not catch. He had some talk with him. As he was about to leave this officer came up to him and asked: "I say, I wonder if you'd mind coming to see me. I'd rather like to have a chat with you." And it is with that most British of introductions, we meet Ashenden, based on Maugham’s experiences in British intelligence in WWI. Many listed Ashenden or the British Agent as a favorite.

3. From Russia with Love and Ian Fleming's work

Former Mossad Lt. Col. Avner Avraham lists Ian Fleming, a former British Naval Intelligence Department officer, as his favorite author, “The one who created James Bond - 007 - in his books, the number one spy ever since.” Ex-CIA officer J.R. Seeger concurs: “Fleming’s works reflect an entirely different time in the early Cold War. They are well written and stand the test of time - especially From Russia with Love. As we enter a new Cold War, these books will become even more relevant - certainly with regard to tradecraft but in tone and atmospherics.”

2. The Quiet American and Graham Greene's work

Many regard the writer, journalist, and former MI6 officer Graham Greene as one of the leading English novelists of the 20th century. Ex-GCHQ historian Tony Comer cites The Quiet American as one of Greene’s finest novels, noting it deals with the early days of US involvement in Indochina: “Greene highlights the consequences of Pyle’s failure to understand the cultural context in which he is operating, an important lesson for anybody involved in foreign intelligence gathering.” 

Comer isn't alone in his admiration for the British author. "If I had to settle for only one author, I would pick Graham Greene. His stories are atmospheric and imbued with strong senses of time and place," said Christopher Turner, an ex-CIA undercover officer and fan of classic spy fiction that offers character-driven plots and immersive settings.

"The Human Factor transports readers to the Cold War murk of 1970s' London and illuminates the motivations of MI6/SIS traitors like Kim Philby. Its scenes are vivified with cold rain, slippery cobblestones, tumblers of whisky, and tense encounters with moody dialogue. Readers are transported from their armchairs to a fascinating world of Greene's making," said Turner, the author of The Cassia Spy Ring in World War II Austria and other books. "Similarly, The Heart of the Matter (1948) sweeps readers to West Africa in the 1940s, and Greene's famous film script (and novella), The Third Man (1949), gives viewers (and readers) a peek at the ruins and lurking dangers of postwar Vienna. Realism is a hallmark of Greene's books. He came by this realism not only through travel and living abroad, but also by his wartime service as an intelligence officer."

SPYSCAPE Top 50 Spy Novels countdown
John le Carré film cameos (clockwise) include The Little Drummer Girl, The Night Manager, A Most Wanted Man, and Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy.

1. Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy and John le Carré’s work

John le Carré, the enigmatic scribbler of microdots and moles, remains at the top of the spying game even after his 2020 death. “Le Carré captured the dirty soul of espionage - and especially counterespionage - and gave us characters better than any contemporary writer of the genre,” said Barry Broman, an ex-CIA officer who once won a game of darts from le Carré during the war in Cambodia. Broman described David Cornwell (his true name) as witty and urbane. “He told great stories in dialect.” 

While Smiley’s People is Barry’s favorite novel, le Carré’s murky novels and devious spymasters clearly strike a chord with many intelligence operatives. Ulrich Larsen and Christopher Turner both ranked The Spy Who Came in From the Cold. Many others praised Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy. “Almost all of le Carre's novels are first-rate,” said James Lawler, an ex-CIA officer and author of In the Twinkling of an Eye. “But TTSS stands out for the slow-burn reveal of who the mole in MI-6 is and the ultimate treachery.”

Real-Life Spies Pick Their Top 100 Spy Books From Box 88 to The Quiet American

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Imagine having access to the personal bookshelves of top intelligence operatives, including CIA, FBI, Mossad, and KGB-trained agents. Well, we did just that and asked them to share their all-time favorite spy books. Get ready to discover the ultimate reading list for anyone who loves the world of espionage and covert operations.

Here are the Top 100 Spy Books both fiction and non-fiction selected by spies, our True Spies team and our SPYSCAPE bookshop - you won't find another list like this anywhere in the world.

SPYSCAPE TOP 50 SPY NOVELS

SPYSCAPE Top 50 Spy Novels

50. Holy Spy & John Shakespeare Tudor Spy series by Rory Clements 

The Tudor Spy series is a window into Elizabethan England through the eyes of John Shakespeare, a private investigator who introduces us to a world of murder, conspiracy, royals, criminals, spies, and his young brother Will Shakespeare. Ex-journalist Rory Clements’ sinister twists and incredible research has introduced a new generation to historical espionage - rightly so. 

49. Where Eagles Dare by Alistair MacLean

Scottish novelist Alistair MacLean is known to readers of neck-snapping spy fiction but some may not be as familiar with his gritty page-turners. MacLean’s When Eagles Dare (1976) follows British commandos on a mission to infiltrate a Gestapo HQ. The book - later a Hollywood movie - was a game-changer for True Spy James Stejskal. As a young man, he watched Clint Eastwood onscreen and decided to jump out of airplanes and work behind enemy lines. Stejskal, who later became a CIA operative, never looked back.

48. Red Widow by Alma Katsu

Red Widow is described as a cross between Killing Eve and Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy but there’s an authenticity that comes only with experience - in Katsu’s case, her decades spent working as a senior analyst at the CIA and NSA. Red Widow involves two CIA officers drawn into a threat involving the Russia Division that may be coming from within. If you enjoy cerebral spy thrillers, this one should be high on your list.

47. Our Woman in Moscow, Beatriz Williams 

Part mystery, part espionage thriller, Beatriz Williams’ Our Woman in Moscow deserves your full attention. Set In London in 1948, Iris Digby disappears with her husband, an American diplomat working abroad. Fast forward four years and Ruth Macallister is on her way to Moscow, desperate to extract her sister from behind the Iron Curtain. 

46. How To Betray Your Country by James Wolff 

James Wolff’s How To Betray Your Country is the sequel to Beside the Syrian Sea and a clever standalone spy novel. Wolff examines the cost of a life spent in the shadows and the inner turmoil of August Drummond, a disgraced spy on the edge of a breakdown. An operation involving an Iranian scientist in Istanbul presents an age-old question: is it better to follow orders or your conscience? 

SPYSCAPE Top 50 Spy Novels

45. Above Suspicion by Helen MacInnes 

A short time after moving to New York, Scottish-American author Helen MacInnes began writing Above Suspicion (1941), a semi-autobiographical tale of honeymooners in Europe who spied on the Nazis. The book mirrored her own life as MacInnes had lived in Europe with her husband, a British MI6 officer. Most of her writing, fueled by her love of international relations and the world of espionage, reached the bestseller lists including The Salzburg Connection (1968).

44. A Loyal Spy by Simon Conway

California-born Simon Conway is a man on a mission. When he’s not writing bestsellers, the ex-British Army officer works with landmine-clearing charity The Halo Trust. His award-winning A Loyal Spy involves issues close to his heart - war and betrayal. The plot revolves around Jonah, who thought he’d murdered his friend Nor ed-Din in the Khyber Pass. Both were groomed for intelligence work. Neither expected to face what might happen in London.

43. A Treachery of Spies by Manda Scott

More WWII spies, double agents, and traitors abound in Manda Scott’s A Treachery of Spies, It begins with the murder of a beautiful elderly woman in France. She’s been killed in a way that indicates the victim may have been a traitor to the French Resistance. The past is buried but it may hold the only clue to solving the mystery.

42. Night Falls On The City: The Lost Masterpiece of Wartime by Sarah Gainham 

It is 1938 in Vienna and a beautiful actress, Julia Homburg, is married to a clever politician named Franz Wedeker who happens to be Jewish. As the Nazi troops enter Austria, citizens begin to disappear. Will Franz be next? Spies mingle in the streets, forcing Franz into hiding. Night Falls on the City is the first of a trilogy written by Rachel Ames, a British novčlist and journalist, who moved to Vienna and wrote under the pen name Sarah Gainham. 

41. The Best of Our Spies by Alex Gerlis

Alex Gerlis, a former BBC journalist and SPYEX consultant, is the author of The Spy Masters espionage books. His first, The Best of Our Spies, is being developed into a television series and involves a Royal Navy Intelligence officer on a mission to discover what exactly his wife was doing during WWII.

SPYSCAPE Top 50 Spy Novels
Sun Tzu’s wrote about spies in The Art of War in the period of 771 to 256 BCE

40. Outbreak by Frank Gardner

BBC security correspondent Frank Gardner trained with the British Army biathlon team and was later an officer. That may explain why Gardner’s runaway bestseller Outbreak reads like a bullet-paced thriller with an espionage twist: British Intelligence is convinced Russia is developing a new generation of bio-weapons but are the Brits looking in the wrong place? 

39. Secret Lovers by Charles McCarry

American writer Charles McCarry worked as an undercover CIA officer so keep a careful eye on his tradecraft tips in Secret Lovers. The story begins with a courier who delivers a manuscript written by a Russian dissident to CIA agent Paul Christopher. Meanwhile, Christopher’s wife decides to have an affair with a film director. Are the two events linked? You’ll need to put the pieces together as Christopher races to identify the leak and even more explosive events.

38. Living Lies by James Lawler

James Lawler, author of the fictional Living Lies about Iran’s covert nuclear weapons program knows the terrain well. Lawler is an ex-CIA expert on WMDs and counterintelligence, but it is his insight into human nature that really sets this novel apart. Both former CIA officer Rolf Mowatt-Larssen and ex-State Department Psychiatrist Kenneth Dekleva listed James Lawler as a favorite author. (Dekleva and Mowatt-Larssen happen to be published themselves - Dekleva wrote The Negotiator’s Cross and Mowatt-Larssen published A State of Mind. There must be something about spying that burnishes storytelling skills.) 

37. Shadow Dancer by Tom Bradby

British journalist Tom Bradby’s compelling novel Shadow Dancer revolves around Colette, whose Irish husband was killed by the British. Her brothers have dedicated their lives to fighting them and Colette herself is arrested in an aborted bombing raid in London. That’s when she must decide her future: Will Colette inform on the Republicans and see her children again? Or will she remain loyal to her political beliefs and remain in prison? Her MI5 handler isn’t sure of her - or even himself.

36. The Alice Network by Kate Quinn 

Kate Quinn, the author of The Alice Network and The Rose Code, sets a high bar for espionage writers. The Alice Network is historical fiction based on the true story of WWI operative Louise de Bettignies who spied on the Germans for the Brits. The Rose Code is equally compelling, involving a royal wedding in Britain and Bletchley Park codebreakers. We’re hard-pressed to recommend just one of Quinn’s books so we’ll leave the decision in your capable hands.

SPYSCAPE Top 50 Spy Novels
SPYSCAPE Top 50 Spy Novels

35. The Contract Man, part of the Alex King Series by A.P. Bateman

MI6 assassin Alex King is a hard man living in a world of enemies and deadly missions but is the real threat coming from within the heart of the intelligence community? There are enemies on all sides in this gripping series. We suggest starting with the first novel - The Contract Man (2015) - where Alex King sets out to silence the most dangerous man you can imagine (until the next novel, of course). 

34. The Company, A Novel of the CIA by Robert Littell

Robert Littell has amassed an impressive body of work on the US-Soviet conflict. If you don’t know where to start, try The Company, A Novel of the CIA, his nostalgic look at the Agency (known as The Company to insiders), a semi-fictional, historic book about a mole hunt and one of the biggest rabbit holes you’ll ever fall into. You can follow up with The Amateur if you find yourself craving more. 

33. The Walk-In by Gary Berntsen

Former CIA officer Doug Patteson recommends The Walk-In, a novel of spy tradecraft and terror written by a former CIA operative and field commander who cornered Osama bin Laden in Afghanistan. Gary Berntsen’s fictional book involves an Iranian intelligence operative who walks into a US Embassy claiming to possess explosive intelligence but can the man be trusted? 

32. The Charm School by Nelson DeMille

The Charm School, another of Patteson’s favorites, revolves around US Air Force Colonel Sam Hollis, a former Vietnam fighter pilot and US Air Force Intelligence officer in Moscow. Hollis begins to investigate a Soviet plan to ‘Americanize’ Russia that could lead to his death.

31. Mitch Rapp by Vince Flynn and later Kyle Mills

Mitch Rapp is a ‘badass’, a CIA agent and counterterrorism operative who will go to great lengths to stop Middle Eastern terrorist attacks on the US. There are more than a dozen novels in the series so you may want to begin with the character’s first appearance in Transfer of Power or - if you’d rather get the order of the storyline - begin with American Assassin (2010). Either way, you’ll be hooked.

SPYSCAPE Top 50 spy books countdown

30. Stephanie Barron series of Jane Austen Mysteries

The Jane Austen Mysteries portrays the heroine as more of a sleuth than a spy, focusing on Austen’s critical-thinking side. The series has a place in the heart of one of our True Spies, SPYEX consultant Gina Bennett, an ex-CIA analyst and author of National Security Mom: “My Austen fanaticism was shared by former colleague and friend, Jennifer Matthews, who was killed in the al-Qaeda attack in Khost, Afghanistan, on December 30, 2009.” Their last conversation involved the Austen mysteries and Gina promised to send Jennifer Book 2 in the series. “The Jane Austen Mysteries will always have a special place in my heart because of this bittersweet memory.”

29. Foul Lady Fortune by Chloe Gong

The first of an espionage duology, Foul Lady Fortune is the story of an assassin named Rosalind - code name: Fortune - who must investigate a murder that may be linked to the Japanese Imperial Army. Rosalind’s task is to identify who is behind the terror plot. To do so, she must go undercover as a wife in 1930s Shanghai. Foul Lady Fortune comes highly recommended by the SPYSCAPE HQ team. 

28. Thirty-Nine Steps by John Buchan

The 1st Baron of Tweedsmuir wrote the pre-WWI thriller The Thirty-Nine Steps introducing the character Richard Hannay - a Canadian caught up in a spy ring and a murder - who reappears in Greenmantle and Mr. Standfast. John Buchan was attached to the British Army's General HQ Intelligence Section before being sent to Canada as Governor-General where he stayed until his death in 1940. His much-loved character, Richard Hannay, outlived Buchan, appearing in Sick Heart River (aka Mountain Meadow), in 1941. 

27. Gorky Park by Martin Cruz Smith

American novelist Martin Cruz Smith is known for his nine-novel series on Russian investigator Arkady Renko introduced in Gorky Park (1981). We first meet Arkady, chief investigator for the Moscow militsiya, on a case involving three corpses found in an amusement park. Arkady's superior soon introduces him to an American millionaire who may be a KGB informant, but things are just starting to heat up.

26. The Chief Gabriel Allon series by Daniel Silva

Gabriel Allon is center stage in Daniel Silva's espionage series involving an Israeli intelligence unit known as 'the Office' (although not specified as Mossad). Allon was plucked from civilian life to join Operation Wrath of God, a mission to kill those responsible for murdering Israeli athletes at the Munich Olympics. Gripping and gut-wrench in equal measure.

SPYSCAPE Top 50 spy novels countdown
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25. American Spy by Lauren Wilkinson

Wilkinson’s main character Marie has a lot of baggage and Wilkinson wanted to ensure readers of American Spy knew exactly why Marie made bad choices before setting off for an adventure in Africa. “I also felt that, hey, I'm doing something that hasn't been done a whole lot before. My main character is a black female spy, essentially a black CIA officer,” Wilkinson told The Spying Game. “Why not just go as far as I can with the new stuff because who knows if I'll ever get another shot at writing a book? They might get the giant hook and pull me off the stage.” 

24. MIKE4 series by J.R. Seeger

Author J.R. Seeger, an ex-CIA division chief and paratrooper, writes hard-edged spy novels including the MIKE4 series involving Sue O’Connell. The Special Operations Force surveillance specialist is part of a team that ‘finds and fixes’ terrorists in place so assault teams can ‘finish’ the target. Seeger’s books are highly recommended by SPYEX consultant Kenneth Dekleva for their ‘realism and topicality’. 

23. I Am Pilgrim by Terry Hayes

“Not just prescient but a stunning debut novel from the man who wrote the screenplay for Mad Max 2. One incredible book and then gone, with a sequel promised and never delivered,” according to the SPYSCAPE team. If you haven’t read Hayes’ novel, where have you been? Pilgrim follows a former US intelligence agent and author known as the ‘Rider of the Blue’. He gets mixed up with a woman who uses his book to commit untraceable murders in the aftermath of 9/11.

22. The Matchmaker by Paul Vidich 

Another of Dekleva’s favorites is American writer Paul Vidich, praised for his Cold War thrillers and ‘noir to the bone’ spy stories. The Matchmaker focuses on an American translator targeted by the East German Stasi who must confront the truth behind her German husband's mysterious disappearance. Follow up with The Honorable Man, a novel that burrows into the heart of a CIA mole hunt.

21. Need to Know by Karen Cleveland

“My favorite spy novel is Need to Know by my former CIA colleague Karen Cleveland,” ex-CIA officer Christina Hillsberg said. “She's my favorite spy author because of the strong female spy characters she creates that remind me of the talented women I worked with at the CIA.”

SPYSCAPE TOP 50 Non Fiction
SPYSCAPE top 50 spy books countdown
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20. The Berlin Exchange by Joseph Kanon

US author Joseph Kanon uses a Cold War spy swap as a vehicle for The Berlin Exchange. A captured American who spied for the KGB is swapped by the British and returns to East Berlin. But who arranged his release - the KGB? - and what do they want in exchange? We rank Kanon in the Top 20 although we wouldn’t argue with some who made a persuasive case to elevate him to the Top 10.

19. The Hunt for Red October by Tom Clancy 

When the US Naval Institute Press published its first fictional work - The Hunt for Red October (1984) - they struck gold. Tom Clancy’s debut novel about the adventures of Soviet sub-captain Marko Aleksandrovich Ramius and CIA analyst Jack Ryan remains its most successful title. If you’re a fan of the TV series, the Sean Connery movie - and yes, even the video, console, and board games - you’ll want to know where the legacy began. 

18. Red Sparrow by Jason Matthews

A beautiful Russian agent trained in pleasure targets a vulnerable CIA operative to uncover a mole at the heart of the Russian intelligence service. It’s a honeypot plot dreamed up by Jason Matthews, the CIA operative-turned-novelist behind the Red Sparrow spy trilogy. So, is there a real-life sparrow school? Da & nyet. Matthews told CNBC that Red Sparrow is based on what intelligence operatives believe ‘used to be’ a 'school' run by Soviet Russia. No matter. Ex-CIA officer and SPYEX consultant Doug Patteson ranks it on his list of top books to recommend. 

17. The Journeyman Tailor by Gerald Seymour

The Journeyman Tailor by Gerald Seymour delves into the strange relationship that exists between agent handler and agent. According to ex-CIA division chief of operations J.R. Seeger: “It is a realistic portrayal of the relationship which is sometimes positive for both and sometimes only productive for one of the two.” The novel also delves into the question of whether the end justifies the means.

16. Under the Midnight Sun by Keigo Higashino

One of Anthony Horowitz’s favorite authors, Keigo Higashino spins a dark mystery with a twist of industrial espionage in Under the Midnight Sun. It is 1973 when Yosuke Kirihara, an Osaka pawnbroker, is found stabbed to death in an abandoned building. The police finger a few suspects before the novel takes a dramatic turn. We soon find ourselves in the company of Yakuza figures from Japan’s criminal underworld.

SPYSCAPE TOP 50 SPY NOVELS
SPYSCAPE Top 50 spy books

15. Knight Without Armour by James Hilton

Published in the US as Without Armour, Hilton’s thriller was first sold in 1933 and stands the test of time. The plot centers around a British secret agent in Russia who rescues the daughter of a Tsarist minister from a group of Bolshevik revolutionaries. The book comes recommended by ex-CIA officer Christopher Turner, author of The Cassia Spy Ring in WWII Austria.

14. The Secret Agent by Joseph Conrad

Polish-British author Joseph Conrad published his terrorist spy book in 1907 - more than a century later it would become one of the world’s most-cited books in the weeks after 9/11. The Secret Agent deals with anarchism, espionage, terrorism, and exploitation of the vulnerable. The main relationship is between Verloc - a spy for an unnamed foreign country who gets involved in an anarchist plot - and his brother-in-law who has an intellectual disability. 

13. Damascus Station: A Novel by David McCloskey

Written by former CIA case officer David McCloskey, Damascus Station deals with a fictional case officer - Sam Joseph - who is sent to Paris to recruit a Syrian Palace official and soon falls for her, leading to danger in Damascus. Marc Polymeropoulos, author of Clarity in Crisis and a CIA counterterrorism expert, cites Damascus Station as one of his two favorite books (the other is Agents of Innocence below): “Both books/authors captured the essence of CIA espionage operations in the Middle East, and most importantly, the relationship between a case officer and their agent.”

12. Bamboo and Blood by James Church

James Church, the pen name of an author described as “a former Western intelligence officer with decades of experience in Asia”, is known for his ‘Inspector O’ detective novels which detail Korean society. Church is also the author of Bamboo and Blood, a Cold War spy story involving a North Korean diplomat in Pakistan who dies under suspicious circumstances, recommended by author Kenneth Dekleva.

11. Agents of Innocence and other works by David Ignatius

Agents of Innocence revolves around the Beirut CIA station in the Cold War and is a fictional account of the CIA’s recruitment of Jamal Ramlawi, a high-ranking official of Al Fatah. It is also an analysis of Middle Eastern politics by Ignatius, a Washington Post journalist. The novel explores Lebanon's Palestinian, Christian, and Shiite quarters, and Israel's Mossad, through the lens of fiction. In addition to getting Marc Polymeropoulos’ vote, Dekleva also recommended Agents of Innocence.

SPYSCAPE Top 50 Spy Novels

10. Slow Horses and other works by Mick Herron

Some readers will want to see Mick Herron higher on the list - particularly fans of the series Slow Horses - but competition for real estate is fierce in the upper tier of the SPYSCAPE Top Spy Novels. Slow Horses is set in Slough House, a purgatory for washed-up MI5 officers who bide their time until they quit or prove they can do more than jam the photocopier. When a man is abducted, the slow horses see an opportunity to redeem themselves - even if the ‘victim’ isn’t who he seems.

9. The Sympathizer by Viet Thanh Nguyen

Don’t read The Sympathizer because it is a Pulitzer-winning book. Read it because Viet Thanh Nguyen’s debut is an elegant and romantic novel about the legacy of the Vietnam War and a man whose political beliefs clash with his loyalties. The setting is Saigon in 1975 and the last flights are about to leave the country. The lucky depart but they are unaware that a spy is in their midst, traveling with them to Los Angeles where their movements will be reported to the Viet Cong. 

8. Box 88 and other works by Charles Cumming

Charles Cumming is not an MI6 officer. Repeat: Not MI6. Even though the Scottish author may tell you how, in 1995, he was approached by the British Secret Intelligence Service, Cumming wasn’t recruited. Or he might tell you he was approached and then targeted in a honey trap. Or that he went through MI6 training but failed at the last hurdle. We’re not sure which version of the ‘not MI6’ story Cumming is telling these days but we do know that Box 88 deserves its spot in eighth place. It’s about a secret agent who comes of age. And he’s not MI6, okay?

7. The Ipcress File by Len Deighton

You can almost hear the theme music and see Harry Palmer (Michael Caine) smirk over his freshly ground morning coffee as you taste The Ipcress File. The book - and later the movie - are modern classics about a kidnapped scientist but they’re much more than spy stories. They’re a comment about Britain’s class system and the self-confidence of a spy from the streets who wants to show his public school bosses how the game is really played. And once you’ve fallen in love with Palmer, author Len Deighton has cooked up the best meal you’ll ever have in your life.

6. Night Soldiers and other novels by Alan Furst

“Alan Furst is the best in the business,” says SPYEX consultant Jeff Miller, ex-US Army Special Forces and co-author of Vagabonds in the Heart of Darkness. “His novels almost exclusively take place in Europe during the period between the two world wars and are all excellent both in plot and in historical accuracy.” One standout is Night Soldiers and another is one of Jeff’s personal favorites, Mission to Paris, which describes how the Nazis in the 1930s used money, soft power, and coercion to ‘soften up’ France and weaken their resolve in the upcoming war. Miller isn’t the only Furst fan. Ex-CIA officer Patteson also recommends Night Soldiers.

SPYSCAPE Top 50 spy books countdown

5. A Coffin for Dimitrios by Eric Ambler

Tyler Maroney, an expert on corporate intelligence and author of The Modern Detective, is one of several readers of the genre to select Ambler as a favorite author, in particular he enjoyed A Coffin for Dimitrios. “It has it all and inspired all that came later: international intrigue, plot twists, well-sketched characters, and tradecraft. Graham Greene and John LeCarre stand on Ambler’s shoulders.”

4. Ashenden by Somerset Maugham

“It was not till the beginning of September that Ashenden, a writer by profession, who had been abroad at the outbreak of the war, managed to get back to England. He chanced soon after his arrival to go to a party and was there introduced to a middle-aged Colonel whose name he did not catch. He had some talk with him. As he was about to leave this officer came up to him and asked: "I say, I wonder if you'd mind coming to see me. I'd rather like to have a chat with you." And it is with that most British of introductions, we meet Ashenden, based on Maugham’s experiences in British intelligence in WWI. Many listed Ashenden or the British Agent as a favorite.

3. From Russia with Love and Ian Fleming's work

Former Mossad Lt. Col. Avner Avraham lists Ian Fleming, a former British Naval Intelligence Department officer, as his favorite author, “The one who created James Bond - 007 - in his books, the number one spy ever since.” Ex-CIA officer J.R. Seeger concurs: “Fleming’s works reflect an entirely different time in the early Cold War. They are well written and stand the test of time - especially From Russia with Love. As we enter a new Cold War, these books will become even more relevant - certainly with regard to tradecraft but in tone and atmospherics.”

2. The Quiet American and Graham Greene's work

Many regard the writer, journalist, and former MI6 officer Graham Greene as one of the leading English novelists of the 20th century. Ex-GCHQ historian Tony Comer cites The Quiet American as one of Greene’s finest novels, noting it deals with the early days of US involvement in Indochina: “Greene highlights the consequences of Pyle’s failure to understand the cultural context in which he is operating, an important lesson for anybody involved in foreign intelligence gathering.” 

Comer isn't alone in his admiration for the British author. "If I had to settle for only one author, I would pick Graham Greene. His stories are atmospheric and imbued with strong senses of time and place," said Christopher Turner, an ex-CIA undercover officer and fan of classic spy fiction that offers character-driven plots and immersive settings.

"The Human Factor transports readers to the Cold War murk of 1970s' London and illuminates the motivations of MI6/SIS traitors like Kim Philby. Its scenes are vivified with cold rain, slippery cobblestones, tumblers of whisky, and tense encounters with moody dialogue. Readers are transported from their armchairs to a fascinating world of Greene's making," said Turner, the author of The Cassia Spy Ring in World War II Austria and other books. "Similarly, The Heart of the Matter (1948) sweeps readers to West Africa in the 1940s, and Greene's famous film script (and novella), The Third Man (1949), gives viewers (and readers) a peek at the ruins and lurking dangers of postwar Vienna. Realism is a hallmark of Greene's books. He came by this realism not only through travel and living abroad, but also by his wartime service as an intelligence officer."

SPYSCAPE Top 50 Spy Novels countdown
John le Carré film cameos (clockwise) include The Little Drummer Girl, The Night Manager, A Most Wanted Man, and Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy.

1. Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy and John le Carré’s work

John le Carré, the enigmatic scribbler of microdots and moles, remains at the top of the spying game even after his 2020 death. “Le Carré captured the dirty soul of espionage - and especially counterespionage - and gave us characters better than any contemporary writer of the genre,” said Barry Broman, an ex-CIA officer who once won a game of darts from le Carré during the war in Cambodia. Broman described David Cornwell (his true name) as witty and urbane. “He told great stories in dialect.” 

While Smiley’s People is Barry’s favorite novel, le Carré’s murky novels and devious spymasters clearly strike a chord with many intelligence operatives. Ulrich Larsen and Christopher Turner both ranked The Spy Who Came in From the Cold. Many others praised Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy. “Almost all of le Carre's novels are first-rate,” said James Lawler, an ex-CIA officer and author of In the Twinkling of an Eye. “But TTSS stands out for the slow-burn reveal of who the mole in MI-6 is and the ultimate treachery.”


TOP 50 NON-FICTION SPY BOOKS

Real-life Spies Pick Their Favorite Non-Fiction Spy Books

50. The CIA Manual of Trickery and Deception by John Mulholland

Among the many tricks the CIA had at its disposal during the Cold War was a top-secret manual of deception written by magician John Mulholland, a stage performer who honed his skills trading tricks in the back of New York City's Martinka magic shop. The CIA paid Mulholland $3,000 to write its guide to trickery and deception - a "James Bond meets Harry Houdini" textbook, as master magician Lance Burton described it. All copies were thought to have been destroyed in 1975, but two intelligence agents managed to get their hands on the document and published it decades later.

49. Life Undercover: Coming of Age in the CIA by Amaryllis Fox

“We’re impossibly young to have the fate of the world in our hands,” Amaryllis Fox writes in Life Undercover, noting she started as a 21-year-old CIA analyst and became an undercover officer. “Such is the way of the Agency. By 35, any operative worth their salt has gone hard enough at their job to erode their cover.” Fox’s memoir is a fast-paced thriller that reads like fiction but the description of Fox’s training at the Farm alone is worth the ride.

48. The KGB’s Poison Factory From Lenin to Litvinenko by Boris Volodarsky

Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko died weeks after drinking tea spiked with radioactive polonium-210 in 2006. The former FSS Lt. Colonel certainly wasn’t the first or last victim to blame his murder on Moscow. In The KGB’s Poison Factory, former Russian military intelligence officer Boris Volodarsky traces the history of poison assassinations dating back to 1917 and Lenin’s Cheka secret police and covers 20 ghastly deaths. 

47. The Accidental Spy by Tracy Walder

Former sorority sister Tracy Walder wanted to teach history after USC but joined the CIA instead. Her job? Travel the globe post 9/11 and disrupt al-Qaeda plots. The many men Tracy encountered along the way often underestimated the young blonde in a pink pashmina but certainly not for long. Walder, The Accidental Spy, eventually joined the FBI to fight the enemy on her home turf, revealing a husband-and-wife team sending military secrets to China. A riveting read.

46. Operation Gladio by Paul L. Williams

History jumps off the page in journalist Paul L. Williams’ disturbing exposé Operation Gladio, the story of a post-WWII alliance forged by the CIA, the Sicilian and US mafias, and the Vatican to battle a feared Communist invasion of Europe. Williams details the ‘stay-behind’ military units and makes the case that the units were used in South America and NATO-based countries to disrupt left-wing movements. 

45. The CASSIA Spy Ring in World War II Austria by C. Turner‍

Written by a former undercover CIA officer, The CASSIA Spy Ring explores America’s most effective spy ring in Austria, Germany's neighbor. This gripping account of CASSIA describes its contributions to the Allied war effort, including reports on the V-2 missile, Nazi death camps, and advanced combat aircraft. Meticulously researched, Turner’s story is one of espionage, betrayal, and behind-the-scenes work to stop the Nazis.

44. Scorpions’ Dance Jefferson Morley

Can there possibly be an untold story about the 1972 Watergate break-in? Yes, Morley proves there is much to reveal about the power struggle between President Richard Nixon and his CIA Director Richard Helms, two men who shared the deadly secrets that ended a presidency. They circle each other in a Scorpions' Dance. “We protected Helms from one hell of a lot of things,” Nixon growled on one of his infamous Watergate tapes. “You open that scab there’s a hell of a lot of things.”

Spies pick their favorite non-fiction spy books

43. Behind Enemy Lines by Marthe Cohn

Marthe Cohn lost members of her family during WWII and felt she had nothing to live for when Marthe slipped Behind Enemy Lines disguised as a German nurse intent on spying for France and its WWII Allies. Supposedly, Marthe was searching for her Nazi fiancé but the unlikely Jewish spy was really gathering intel on German positions that ended up saving hundreds of lives. Cohn kept her story a secret until she was 80.

42. Abyss: The Cuban Missile Crisis 1962 by Max Hastings

Max Hasting has come up with another bestseller examining the ‘60s missile crisis. As the Americans and the Soviets stare into the Abyss, contemplating the threat of nuclear war, Hastings' story unfolds through many eyes including the national leaders and American pilots. His research is astonishing and Hastings deservedly retains his position as a master historian. 

41. The Entity: Five Centuries of Secret Vatican Espionage by Eric Frattini

Eric Frattini unravels the Vatican’s secret spy service known as the Holy Alliance, and later The Entity, which has served 40 Popes and carried out policies from schisms to persecutions and allegedly even kidnappings. SPYSCAPE agrees with Spanish newspaper El País, who describe The Entity as: “A true story that surpasses any novel by John le Carré.”

40. Iran: The Untold Story by Mohamed Heikal

Arab journalist Mohamed Heikal offers an insightful look at Iran, the Shah, and Ayatollah Khomeini. The book also serves as an introduction to The Safari Club - sometimes referred to as ‘the second CIA’ for its off-the-books operations at a time when US President Jimmy Carter and the Church Commission were clipping the Agency’s wings. Iran: The Untold Story lives up to its title.

39. Active Measures - The Secret History of Disinformation and Political Warfare by Thomas Rid

Active Measures details Russian disinformation campaigns from the early 1920's up to the 2016 US Presidential campaign. SPYEX Consultant Peter Warmka, a former senior intelligence officer with the CIA, describes the book as very insightful: “It has helped me exercise greater critical thinking when evaluating various sources of news media.” You may also want to check out Warmka’s own book, Confessions of a CIA Spy - The Art of Human Hacking

SPYSCAPE book shop in New York City
SPYSCAPE HQ has the largest selection of spy books in New York City. Our collection is also online.

38. Case by Case: A US Army Counterintelligence Agent in WWII by Ib Melchior 

Ib Melchior, a former operative with the OSS and the US Army Counter Intelligence Corps., recalls his time as a counterespionage agent in Case by Case. He recounts how CIC agents were trained to search out spies and saboteurs and work behind enemy lines. His daring experiences are the plots for his many bestsellers, including Order of Battle: Hitler's Werewolves, and Sleeper Agent.

37. Invisible Ink by Guy Stern

Guy Stern was a Ritchie Boy, sent from Ft. Richie, Maryland to the front line to interrogate German PoWs and his humanity and empathy that shines through the 13 chapters of his incredible memoir Invisible Ink. His story begins with the meeting of Stern's parents and the Nazi’s rise to power. Stern immigrated to the US at 15 and was drafted into the US Army, soon finding himself selected for a special military intelligence unit. He returned to a career as a scholar, author, and decorated veteran.

36. The Search for the Manchurian Candidate by John D. Marks

The Search for the Manchurian Candidate is the dark story of the CIA’s mind-control experiments and an era of seemingly unrestrained human experimentation. It is likely the most well-researched and shocking account of Cold War CIA operations ever written.

Spies pick their favorite non-fiction spy books

35. Moscow Rules by Antonio and Jonna Mendez

Antonio Mendez and his wife, Jonna, bring us inside the US Embassy in Moscow where US officers fear the walls have eyes as well as ears. The couple - both CIA heads of technical services during their careers - have written one of the most interesting books about the Cold War era along with the Moscow Rules officers observed to protect intelligence sources. 

34. All the Shah's Men by Stephen Kinzer

Former CIA officer and Russia expert Alex Finley rates All the Shah's Men by Stephen Kinzer, about the CIA's overthrow of Iranian Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh in order to install the Shah. Finley, the author of the Victor Caro series of books, said All the Shah's Men reads like a spy novel but uncovers fascinating historical details.

33. The Wonga Coup by Adam Roberts

Another of Alex Finley’s favorites is The Wonga Coup: Guns, Thugs, and the Steely Determination to Create Mayhem. The book digs into the intrigue around an attempted coup in oil-rich Equatorial Guinea in 2004 which made headlines over the alleged involvement of British PM Margaret Thatcher's son, Mark.

32. The Big Breach by Richard Tomlinson

The Big Breach is the story of an MI6 officer recruited at Cambridge by the British foreign intelligence service. Richard Tomlinson's descriptions of his MI6 training are insightful and amusing but the book takes a dark turn. Tomlinson also smuggled nuclear secrets out of Moscow and ran a Sarajevo undercover operation before he was fired and jailed in one of Britain's toughest maximum security prisons. From start to finish, it’s a page-turner.
 

31. Need to Know by Nicholas Reynolds‍

SPYEX consultant John.R. Seeger, an expert on counterintelligence and insider threats, considers Nick Reynolds' Need to Know the best book of 2022. “This book covers the growth and transformation of US intelligence during WWII from a small group of boutique offices run by amateurs to an intelligence community ready to fight in the Cold War.” 

30. The Art of Intelligence by Hank Crumpton

Recommended by SPYEX consultant Doug Patteson, a former CIA operations officer, The Art of Intelligence is told by the officer who led the CIA's global covert operations against terrorists including al-Qaeda. Crumpton’s book combines thoughtful meditation with old-school spycraft in a lively and accessible way.

Spies pick their favorite non-fiction spy books

29. The President's Book of Secrets by David Priess‍

For decades, the US president has received a distilled, top-secret daily intelligence report citing global threats and opportunities known as ‘the Book’ in national security circles. The details of most Presidential Daily Briefings are classified but The Book of Secrets explores how power operates at the highest levels. David Priess, a former daily briefer, also offers a window into presidential decision-making.

28. The Triple Agent: the Al-Qaeda Mole who Infiltrated the CIA by Joby Warrick

Lindsay Moran, a former CIA officer and expert on covert ops, intelligence, and disinformation, recommends The Triple Agent as “very solid journalism”, adding that Washington Post journalist Joby Warrick “managed to tell a complex, nuanced story while safeguarding any information that should not have made it to the public light”. Moran has also penned her own memoir, Blowing My Cover.

27. A State of Mind by Rolf Mowatt-Larssen

Ex-CIA officer James Lawler, an expert on WMDs, counterintelligence, and insider threats, recommends A State of Mind by Rolf Mowatt-Larssen as an “incisive, no-holds-barred look at an intelligence officer's spiritual evolution”. Mowatt-Larssen’s memoir is also a journey of faith in the post-9/11 world.

26. Honorable Men by William Colby

Honorable Men is two books in one. In the first half, Colby recounts his career of covert action in WWII and afterward in Sweden, Italy, and Vietnam. The latter half of the book sees Colby move into senior command and portrays his wider perspective in 1970s America. Colby served as the CIA’s controversial director from 1973 to 1976 and brings his interesting perspective on Watergate and Vietnam.

Spies pick their favorte non-fiction spy book
Ex-CIA Operations Officer Doug Patteson recommended nine non-fiction books (above)

25. Circle of Treason by Sandra Grimes and Jeanne Vertefeuille

Doug Patteson, a former CIA operations officer certified in Humint collection and counterterrorism, is an avid reader and author who contributed to More Stories From Langley. Doug recommended nine non-fiction books (see above) including Circle of Treason about the CIA team who hunted down one of their own, US-Russian double agent Aldrich Ames whose actions contributed to the deaths of at least 10 Soviet intelligence officers.

24. A Spy for All Seasons by Dewey Clarridge

Another recommendation from Patteson, this time a memoir from ex-CIA Deputy Director Duane R. ‘Dewey’ Clarridge. A Spy for All Seasons recounts the clandestine activities he supervised. Clarridge is an interesting character - he helped found the CIA Counterterrorism Center, was indicted (and later pardoned) for his role in the Iran-Contra scandal, and headed a private espionage op in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

23. Good Hunting by Jack Devine

One of Patteson’s favorites, Good Hunting by CIA spymaster Jack Devine, is about the spymaster who ran Charlie Wilson's War in Afghanistan. It was the Cold War’s largest covert action and Devine put Stinger missile into the hands of the mujahideen during their war with the Soviets. Good Hunting is a sophisticated read about CIA ops.

22. The Main Enemy by Milt Bearden and James Risen

The Main Enemy is the inside story of the CIA's final showdown with the KGB at the tail end of the Cold War. The book is based on hundreds of interviews with operatives from both sides, telling the story of spies who came of age in the shadow of the Cuban missile crisis and Cold War starting with the ‘Year of the Spy’ when, one by one, the CIA’s agents in Moscow began to die.

Real-life Spies Pick Their Top 50 Non-Fiction Spy Books

21. Rise and Kill First by Ronen Bergman

Ex-CIA officer Rolf Mowatt-Larssen, author of A State of Mind, recommends Rise and Kill First by Israeli journalist Ronen Bergman which reveals the secret history of Israel's targeted assassinations including a 2010 operation that saw Israeli agents converge in Dubai to target Mahmoud al-Mabhouh, an arms supplier for the Palestinian group Hamas. Ronen has been lauded for his access to official reports and officials, which give his work authority and authenticity. 

20. Setting the East Ablaze by Peter Hopkirk

John R. Seeger, ex-CIA division chief of operations, calls Setting the East Ablaze his favorite non-fiction book but he’s recommending all of Hopkirk’s work: “Every single book by Hopkirk starting with The Great Game should be on your bookshelf but this book focuses on the expansion of the Soviet Empire and the little know effort by the British Secret Intelligence Service to counter that expansion. Setting the East Ablaze has “strategic discussion with more than a few chapters of derring-do,” Seeger added. 

19. License to Parent by Christina Hillsberg‍

Our SPYSCAPE panel highly recommends Christina Hillsberg and License to Parent, which details how Christina and her husband - also a former CIA undercover officer - raise their children using spy techniques and training to ensure their resourcefulness. The book is full of safety and security advice and adults without children will be just as fascinated to read Hillsberg’s book - part memoir, part security training.

18. The Recruiter by Douglas London

Douglas London’s memoir The Recruiter is about a CIA spymaster who spent 34 years running foreign agents and trying not to get pulled down in the vicious undertow of shark-infested waters. London was threatened at gunpoint, chased through the streets, and lied his way out of danger for a living but his story is more George Smiley than James Bond. 

17. Ghost Wars by Steve Coll‍

Pulitzer Prize-winning author Steve Coll is an expert on the rise of the Taliban, the emergence of Osama bin Laden, and the secret efforts by CIA officers and their agents to capture or kill bin Laden in Afghanistan after 1998. Ghost Wars is recommended by ex-CIA officer Doug Patteson.

16. We Few: US Special Forces in Vietnam by Nick Brokhausen

Jeff Miller and his partner Nick Brokhausen have been featured on several True Spies podcasts and we also enjoyed their book Vagabonds: Tourists in the Heart of Darkness. If you are a fan of Brokhausen's We Few, you may also want to check out Whispers in the Tall Grass.

SPYSCAPE spies pick their favorite spy novels

15. Breaking Cover by Michele Assad

Michele Assad's book is inspirational, uplifting, and authentic. "It is a real story about the world of espionage and gives a unique window into the men and women who risk it all for a higher purpose,” said counterterrorism specialist Joseph Assad. Breaking Cover details how CIA officers were able to use their skills not only for espionage and protecting their country, but also to lead an effort that rescued dozens of families from ISIS brutality and airlifted them to the safety of their new homes in Europe.

14. MI9 by Helen Fry

British author Helen Fry has written more than 25 books on WWII with a particular focus on intelligence and PoWs, including her acclaimed The Walls Have Ears. In 2022 she broke ground with the story of the top-secret MI9 and the agents who helped PoWs escape confinement and evade capture in the European theater of operations.

13. The Secret Royals: Spying and the Crown by Richard Aldrich and Rory Cormac

An incredibly well-researched and thoroughly enjoyable book about the long history of espionage and the royals, recounting how the British secret services grew out of attempts to assassinate Victoria. The Secret Royals also looks at more recent stories including details of the failed 1974 kidnapping attempt against Princess Anne and Princess Diana’s training with the SAS (they set her hair on fire by accident). A must-read for fans of espionage and the royals. 

12. Operation Overflight by Gary Powers

Francis Gary Powers Jr. - author of Enemy Territory and an expert on the Cold War, aviation, and the U-2 incident involving his father Gary Powers - recommends two books for readers: “I would highly recommend my father’s book, Operation Overflight, and James Donovan’s book, Strangers on a Bridge.” The two books were the basis for Steven Spielberg’s 2015 Cold War thriller Bridge of Spies starring Tom Hanks.

11. Russians Among Us: Sleeper Cells, Ghost Stories, and the Hunt for Putin's Spies by Gordon Corera

BBC security correspondent Gordon Corera takes readers on a journey from the Cold War between the US and Russia to alleged interference in the 2016 US presidential election. Russians Among Us also recounts the 2010 US spy swap of deep-cover sleeper agents. Ex-GCHQ historian Tony Comer calls the book: “Very moving as well as informative. It describes three-dimensional people rather than caricatures.” Although the agents may have been up to no good, Corera’s book is written in a way that allows readers to empathize as their lives and families fall apart.

Spies pick their favoirte non-fiction spy books
spies pick their favorite non-fiction spy books

10. Left of Boom by Douglas Laux

Personable and self-deprecating, Left of Boom is Douglas Laux’s story of his time in Afghanistan. Like so many CIA officers his age, Laux’s entire life changed on September 11, 2001. Laux decided to put his medical education on hold, join the CIA, and get to the heart of the action in Afghanistan. Doug confounded his peers by dressing like a native and mastering the local dialect but spying took its toll.

9. The Code Book by Simon Singh

Simon Singh unravels the secrets behind code breaking in an entertaining and unusual way. He covers the history of codes and ciphers from Roman times, through British Medieval history, the Enigma codes and Bletchley Park, deciphering lost languages (a code of sorts), public key cryptography, and RSA/PGP. He also touches on the possibilities of quantum computing and the effect on codes (and code breaking). You don’t have to be a techie to love The Code Book.

8. See No Evil by Robert Baer

Ex-CIA officer Lindsay Moran's favorite author is another former CIA officer, Bob Baer, and it is easy to understand why. Baer’s controversial memoir See No Evil recounts his career in the CIA's war on terrorism, running agents in the Middle East and explaining how Washington sabotaged the CIA's efforts to root out the world's deadliest terrorists. Baer’s book inspired the George Clooney movie Syriana. If you like Baer’s work you may also want to read The Fourth Man, his first-hand account of a CIA mole hunt. 

7. The Devil's Chessboard by David Talbot

Allen Dulles, the CIA’s first civilian director, lived in dark times. He may also have colluded with Nazi-controlled cartels, German war criminals, and the Mafia, targeting foreign leaders for assassination. But was Dulles really pulling the levers behind the scenes when JFK was shot in 1962? There's no smoking gun. The Devil’s Chessboard:: Allen Dulles, the CIA, and the Rise of America’s Secret Government is a disturbing book, however, with troubling questions that will stay with you - even when you’d prefer to look away. Talbot also wrote the bestselling Brothers: The Hidden History of the Kennedy Years.

6. Gray Day by Eric O'Neill 

Eric O'Neill, the ex-FBI agent who brought down US-Russian double agent Robert Hanssen, is the author of the incredible story of a rookie agent and a deadly traitor. O’Neill, 26 at the time, essentially went undercover as himself to gather evidence on Hanssen. He reveals how the Soviet spy covered his tracks and kept up a charade for years as O’Neill went ‘gray’, blending in so he could do his job without raising suspicion. Gray Day exudes tension and paranoia, the perfect backdrop for one of the greatest American spy stories of the century.

spies pick their favorite spy books

5. Spycraft by H. Keith Melton, Henry Robert Schlesinger, and Robert Wallace

Ex-CIA officer Doug Patteson also recommended Spycraft, The Secret History of the CIA's Spytechs which is laden with subminiature cameras and cigarette packages loaded with bullets. Modern operatives will appreciate the quirky devices conjured up by the boffins at the CIA's Office of Technical Services. It’s an incredible tale of the men and women who invented talking trees, exploding rats, and inflatable airplanes. Even Q would be impressed.

4. The House on Garibaldi Street by Isser Harel

Ex-Mossad Lt. Col. Avner Avraham recommends The House on Garibaldi Street by ex-Mossad chief Isser Harel. The focus is on the capture of the Nazi criminal Eichmann in 1960, Mossad's first major op, which Avner describes as “complex and full of creativity - and it was a precedent for a Mossad head to write a book at all, which was published in the ‘70s… The book could not reveal what we know today, but I found in it many clues and amazing codes that I was able to crack.” He also recommends Hunting Eichmann by Neal Bascomb, which is highly rated by our SPYSCAPE team.

3. Deep Undercover by Jack Barsky

The KGB sent Jack Barsky to America in the ‘70s to live Deep Undercover in New York. Ex-CIA officer Peter Warmka calls Barsky his favorite author: “As a Soviet illegal whose mission was to penetrate intelligence circles within the US, his autobiography reveals the human side of espionage which includes years of personal sacrifice, ideological questioning, and loneliness.” Former FBI special agent Robin Dreeke, author of Sizing People Up, considers Deep Undercover the “perfect blend of the true life of a KGB deep cover agent during the Cold War, as well as a great history lesson on post-WWII life in East Germany and the Soviet Union.”

2. A Woman of No Importance by Sonia Purnell

American heiress-turned-spy Virginia Hall changed the course of WWII. Even the German Gestapo was worried, sending out an urgent transmission: "She is the most dangerous of all Allied spies. We must find and destroy her." Journalist Sonia Purnell brilliantly captures the spirit of resistance and risk behind enemy lines where a vicious guerrilla campaign is underway. The book is meticulously researched. Every line of A Woman of No Importance counts.

Ben Macintyre book montage

1. Ben Macintyre’s collection of spy books

One author’s name stood out among fans of non-fiction spy books: Britain’s Ben Macintyre. Ex-CIA spymaster Sonya Lim praised The Spy and the Traitor, a thrilling account of KGB Colonel and double agent Oleg Gordievsky. “The book tells the story of the true cost of espionage and gives readers a realistic and still-relevant glimpse into intelligence operations,” Lim said. “The derring-do, treachery, bravery, subterfuge, and loyalty depicted by Macintyre resonate both with intelligence operatives and with avocational connoisseurs of espionage.” Former KGB officer Jack Barsky praised all of Macintyre’s work whereas ex-CIA officer Rolf Mowatt-Larssen singled out A Spy Among Friends, a tale about the Kim Philby affair and betrayal among two MI6 colleagues.

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