Tag Archives: CIA

TBR Tuesday: Maternity leave reads & reviews

What are you reading? Here are a few of the books I’ve been reading while not sleeping. (Yay, newbornhood.)

First up, I recently read Band of Sisters: Coming Home by Annette Lyon, a birthday present to myself. The sequel to Band of Sisters, Coming Home follows the same five National Guard wives as their soldiers return home (or don’t), following the problems of re-entry. Some of the storylines that were left hanging a little bit in the first novel (especially Jessie’s!) are more fully resolved in the sequel. And, of course, I cried many times, like you’re supposed to with any good women’s fiction novel 😉 .


In case you’ve missed it, I’ve spent the last year reading nonfiction about the CIA. I really wanted to see the movie Argo, but I’m not so big on violence. When I saw that there was also a book version of Argo by Tony Mendez & Matt Baglio, I jumped on it.

If you missed the movie trailers, in 1979, Iranian “students” overran the American embassy. They held the staffers there hostage for 444 days. But six Americans escaped from the embassy and became “houseguests” of Canadian diplomats. Argo tells the story of the audacious rescue mission: turning the minor diplomatic officials into a movie crew for a fake movie to get them out of Iran safely.

If you’ve read Tony Mendez’s first book, The Master of Disguise: My Secret Life in the CIA (currently <$4 on Kindle), there’s a lot of repeated information from Mendez’s POV. However, this book does add a more in-depth account from the houseguests’ point of view. Even having read Master of Disguise, I enjoyed this account.


I read almost everything my best friend recommends to me. I’d heard some praise for Code Name Verity by Elizabeth Wein before she recommended it, but once she said she enjoyed it, I put a hold on it at the library that day.

So. Worth. It.

Code Name Verity is the “confession” of a captured Scottish spy, a teenage girl, in World War II. But it’s not just a story about the war. It’s the story of two friends, the spy and her pilot Maddie, and the sacrifices they make for one another—and the true price of friendship. I bawled. Okay, I read this the same week I had the baby, so it’s not like it’s hard to make me cry, but still.

What are you reading? When is the last time a book made you cry?

TBR Tuesday: Look, Ma, I read!

I usually don’t read while drafting a novel. But I took a break from drafting in the middle of March-a-thon for . . . well, mostly for my sanity! Here’s what I read:

I picked up Sarah Eden’s latest novel, Drops of Gold, when the Kindle edition was on sale, and it was exactly what I needed that Sunday. (At $4.99, it’s still a pretty good deal!)

When her father dies and leaves her completely destitute, Marion can think of only one thing to do–make a new life for herself. Commencing a life of duplicity, Marion transforms herself into Mary Wood–governess. In possession of a forged letter of recommendation and cloaked in the anonymity of her new identity, she enters a life of self-imposed servitude as teacher and caretaker of young Miss Caroline Jonquil of Farland Meadows. Her idyllic daydream vision of life at the Meadows is dashed when she finds a child desperately in need of hope and a cold and sorrowful home haunted by the past. With her characteristic sunny disposition, Marion casts her spell upon the household and slowly brings to life the long-forgotten joy of those within.

Layton Jonquil is a man tormented by the lies surrounding the death of his late wife, but he cannot deny his growing attraction for the beautiful governess whose goodness and optimism have touched his dormant heart. Their connection grows ever stronger, and despite the impropriety of harboring feelings for a servant, Layton’s heart whispers that this is the woman he’s destined to love. But when Layton’s fears about the past become too much to bear and the falsehoods in which they are entangled threaten to shatter his and Marion’s blossoming attachment, will true love conquer all?

My take: I don’t normally read a lot of Regency romance, but I really loved this. I especially loved the heroine’s characterization. Despite the tragedy she’s seen, she’s so full of life that it comes out in her stories, her laugh and even her unruly hair! Seriously, she’s just such a rounded, integrated character, that even if I hadn’t really enjoyed the story, I would’ve been glad I read the book.

Fortunately, I also enjoyed the story! The heroine is so well-suited to the hero’s emotional wound, as well. And yes, I cried. A bunch. (I’m a mom who never sleeps. It doesn’t take much.) But amazingly, I didn’t actually resent these tears. That’s saying a lot.


I also finished Spy the Lie by Philip Houston, Michael Floyd, & Susan Carnicero. I’ve mentioned it a couple times, but now that I’m done, I can safely say I loved how this book flouted conventional wisdom about lying with empirical facts. The typical things we think of or see on TV as indicators of lying are often unreliable. You do have to watch body language—and word choice!—very carefully when you’re trying to detect deception, and this book tells you how.

As I mentioned, I picked my copy up from the library, but I liked it so much, I put it on my list to buy.


notsAnother library read was The Name of the Star by Maureen Johnson. This YA paranormal thriller came as a recommendation from a friend. The book follows Aurora “Rory” Devaux who leaves small town Louisiana for a London boarding school. And if that’s not enough of an adventure, a copycat killer is recreating the Jack the Ripper murders right in her neighborhood.

When Rory discovers she’s the only person who can stop the killer, she has to embrace a strange new life and then risk it all to keep the city safe.

The Name of the Star is the first in the Shades of London series. The second book came out just a couple weeks ago: The Madness Underneath. I’m looking forward to it!


I had one more non-fiction read from the library, an oldie but a goodie on parenting, Raising An Emotionally Intelligent Child by John Gottman. Really, my only quibble with the book is that we’re not supposed to use the emotion coaching techniques when we’re pressed for time, too tired, or in front of an audience. When you have three or four kids, when is that not the case?!

So I’ve knocked out an electronic TBR item and all my library books! Hooray for small victories!

What have you read this month? Anything you’d read over and over again—or recommend I stay far, far away from? Come share!

TBR Tuesday: Library reads

I don’t know about you, but I’m much better about reading library books than freebies, ebooks and even books I’ve bought (*eyes 6 feet of unread books on the table* *turns away*). What can I say? I guess I read best under a deadline.

So when I’m writing on a deadline, typically I don’t check out more library books—but this time I just couldn’t resist.

My best friend recommended this one last week. Who could say no after this kind of endorsement?

Did you ever read that one book I recommended…
gosh…
about the ghost detective?

Really pretty good, IMO
And I hate most books now
So that’s high praise. haha

She meant this:

nots
The Name of the Star

Naturally, I immediately placed a hold on it. No, really, I did. And also naturally, it came in a lot sooner than I was banking on. My best friend said the voice reminded me of my book that I’m writing a sequel to now, so maybe it’s just the thing I need to tap into that voice a little better.

The other book I have out from the library, I just came across recently . . . but I can’t remember how! I’m guessing it was a recommendation from Amazon after looking at some CIA books (which, apparently, I do a lot).

Spy the Lie: Former CIA Officers Teach You How to Detect Deception
9781250005854

It’s a nonfiction book about gauging the whether someone’s telling the truth. I’ve learned a lot about research-supported untruthful body language in classes on emotions and body language from psychologist Margie Lawson’s classes, but I was interested to read more about this methodology. I’m only one chapter in and I’m already in love: they openly admit that there’s no such thing as a human lie detector (stupid TV gets on my nerves), and one real-life scenario from the book has already inspired a scene in my WIP.

Hm. The reasons for reading seem a little . . . selfish. But then, aren’t they always?

Have you read either of these? What are you reading now? How does what you’re reading influence your writing?

The Wall of Honor

In case you haven’t noticed around these parts, I’m doing a lot of research on the CIA. My husband saw the word CIA in a recent headline and immediately tore out the article to give to me.

CIA memorial wall with 83 starsIn the lobby of the CIA’s Langley headquarters, there is one wall dedicated as a memorial to those officers who have been killed in the line of duty. Last month, the marble wall received its 103rd star commemorating a CIA officer. Along with the stars carved into the marble, the Book of Honor is displayed, listing the names of those killed.

Well, some of the names. Because CIA officers in the Clandestine Service work with such sensitive and classified materials, sometimes even their names become national secrets, and for years after their death, they are only commemorated in the book with a gold star. More than a third of the entries in the book were blank like this.

Recently, the CIA has declassified 15 names to add to the Book of Honor (leaving 26 blank now). Dating back to the Beirut Embassy bombing in 1983, some of these names were already publicly known, but this marks the first official recognition of these individuals’ sacrifices from the agency that employed them.

The CIA is in a dirty business, but I think it’s only fitting to acknowledge the ultimate sacrifices these individuals made in trying to protect our liberties in whatever way the agency can.

Photo credit: employee work product of CIA; public domain; via Wikipedia

Book review: Class 11 by TJ Waters

As I’ve mentioned before, I’ve been doing a bit of research on the US Central Intelligence Agency for a book. Okay, maybe more than a bit:

Thank you, libraries!

Class 11 was actually not on my list to check out from the library, but like a good little researcher, I looked at all the books with similar call numbers to the ones I’d researched. Voila. By chance, I picked up Class 11 because I figured there might be some relevant info, and it was probably one of the most recent looks at CIA training.

On that same logic, I cracked this book first when I got home—and I only stopped reading for a quick dinner break before I finished the whole book.

Class 11: My Story Inside the CIA’s First Post-9/11 Spy Class (aff) details the training of the first class of CIA officers hired after September 11, 2001. The worst attacks on US soil prompted a lot of people to apply to the agency—military, civilians, professionals, single moms, even a former pro athlete. Author TJ Waters was among that class.

As with the last CIA memoir I reviewed, several reviewers found Waters’s self-description and overall attitude grating. I honestly didn’t notice, but I was kind of mining the book for information as I read, so my focus could have been very different than those readers’. (Plus I’m kinda of the opinion that pretty much all autobiographies tread a fine line between self-congratulatory and totally depressing.)

Having studied a few other CIA memoirs now, I think this is probably one of the most recent, in-depth reviews of several of the tradecraft techniques taught at the Agency. That alone made it worth reading for me. I was disappointed to not get to see the tradecraft in action in the field (and like the author I was sad they didn’t get to do the paramilitary course, which seems to be far shorter than it was in decades past), but it seemed that Waters didn’t serve as a case officer in the field, and frankly, the subject of the book was the CIA class’s training, not their time on the ground.

What do you think? How do you research?

Book review: Blowing My Cover by Lindsey Moran

Okay, before I jump into this book review, I have to tell you why I read it: shockingly (um, not) my latest book is about a spy. I’ve actually written about spies a few times, but this is the first time I’ve used a contemporary CIA officer (not agent!) in one of my novels. Naturally, I had to run out and research.

As I was looking through books on the subject on Amazon, I came across Blowing My Cover: My Life as a CIA Spy by Lindsay Moran, which was touted as “a cross between James Bond and Bridget Jones!” That pretty much sounded like what I was working on, and the back cover copy promised to answer several specific questions I had in the research process. (It didn’t answer the underlying question, however: why did you leave all your research until after you wrote it??)

Best of all? My truly, truly awesome library had a copy. I snuck out and checked it out that night, and read it the next day.
Continue reading Book review: Blowing My Cover by Lindsey Moran