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The Company: A Novel of the Cia, 1951-91 (New Millennium Audio)

The Company: A Novel of the Cia, 1951-91 (New Millennium Audio)

List Price: $99.95
Your Price: $65.97
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Walk the distance, it is worth it
Review: "The Company" has been out for a while, but I have only just come round to reading it. I found it hard to put down, once I read the first 50 pages or so. But then I had to because the book's length makes it difficult to read it in one go.
As with all historical novels you always wonder how close they are based on reality. Characters like Jim Angleton and the Sorcerer/Harvey Torriti (presumably Bill Harvey) should be straight out of reality. On the other hand, you wouldn't mind it to be pure fiction after you discover that one of rising stars in the CIA was discovered to be working for the other side - thirty years after he was hired.
Generally, the book doesn't follow history too closely, but what does one expect. It is a novel. Besides, if Robert Littell had included all the battlegrounds between the CIA and the KGB, this book would come in several volumes.
I don't have any favorite episodes. I loved the whole book. It is great that there are some good spy novels coming out of America.


Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A MASTERPIECE FOR LOVERS OF SPY FICTION
Review: "The Company" is simply the best spy novel that I have ever read.
As an alumnus of the CIA and an unabashed lover of spy fiction
in all of its forms,I also tend to be a tough critic. However,
Littell has created a masterpiece.He skillfully blends real-life
and fictional characters and weaves a story based around real events -- the Soviet invasion of Hungary,the Bay of Pigs,the
Able Archer incident that could have led to World War III,and
the attempted coup against Gorbachev that finally put an end to the Soviet Union. This approach easily could have gone awry.Since
most of the actual events and real-life characters are well-known,the book could have either been boring or incredible.
Instead,it is a compelling story in which the reader cares about all of the characters and gets completely caught up in even the
familiar events of the past.Littell treats all of his characters
-- even the "villains" -- relatively sympathetically,which makes
the whole novel more interesting and compelling.Most important,he
demostrates that he is a masterful story teller.I was genuinely
sad to finish this book.I would have gladly read another 900 pages!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The ultimate spy novel
Review: At first, I though 1200 pages (I have the UK paperback) was a bit long. Very long. But once I got into this book, I couldn't put it down. There are dozens of characters, and the plot follows the great events of the second half of the 20th century, with a drive that is rare in spy novels. Littell is a master at creating atmosphere, and his characters stick with you like chewing gum from a hot sidewalk.

I read this in just a few days, in spite of its length, staying up far too late to do so. I'm looking forward to his next book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: LITTELL IS HIDING BEHIND THE THIN FINGER OF "FICTION"
Review: Fiction my foot!!!This excellent "work of fiction" smells of a lot of reality!!What truly devasted me was James Jesus Angleton's
swansong when Starik(the Old Man)had succeeded in discrediting
him.Angleton identifies a couple of Western notables who are in the Soviet payroll,among them none other than Averell Harriman.THIS IS TRULY AN EARTH-SHAKING REVELATION!!!Many
would think that this is too far-fetched,but remember that Martin Bormann,Hitler's deputy,was a Soviet agent.

Maybe Littell is trying to save his skin from the reputedly murderous COMPANY,but as for me I can see right through his work.
If there's any fiction in this book it would be the embellishment
associated with the agents' adventures in Hungary,Afghanistan,
USSR,etc,etc.This book would have been better off as an actual
history of the COMPANY,not a work of "fiction".

I would have also loved an account of the Cuban Missile debacle
and what the behind-the-scenes action was like,but was truly disappointed when that did not materialise.Another startling revelation was the assassination of John Paul the First a.k.a
Albino Luciani.His death was always smelly.When I was a boy in
the early 1990s I read a book titled The Keys of this Blood,and I suspected the COMPANY of having assassinated him.It's highly unlikely that the election of John Paul the Second was free and fair.Remember he was the first non-Italian Pope in more than 400
years,and he worked very closely with the COMPANY in destabilising communist Eastern Europe;not to mention that "His Holiness" has openly boasted of having "shaken the rotten tree of Communism",leading to the demise of the Soviet Union.I was hoping that Littell would at least say something about this.

THE COMPANY is a great read but for those who are well read in current world affairs,it was disappointingly inadequate!!!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The $64 trillion Question
Review: I enjoyed this book, and I suggest you read it if you like spy fiction or are curious about the CIA.

I agree that some reviewers below reveal too much of the plot, although the author himself tips the biggest "surprise" withing the first quarter of the book.

As a writer, the author is certainly not John Le Carre, and tends to be clumsy at points, but the story carries the day. The author does make some factual errors, especially anachronisms, but they only hurt for a moment, since the plot is usually engrossing enough to carry the reader past them. There are number of typos that sometimes are annoying, but that is the publishers' fault.

One major quibble. The author glosses over the biggest single fact and failure in the history of the CIA and American policy in the second half of the twentieth century: how could the CIA and the American government miss the fact that the Soviet Union was in a long collapse beginning in the late sixties, and almost ready to implode by 1980? Many many people, both public and private, who visited the Soviet Union recognized and reported that fact. Almost any Russian, speaking privately, was aware of that fact and willing to share it.

The answers are glossed over in the book -- first, intelligence services have to "serve" their political masters, and there were no successful American political figures willing to publicly state that the Soviets were collapsing, and many whose careers were partly built on the notion of the famous "bear in the woods." CIA agents and analysts reporting that the Soviet Union was about to implode would have been looking for other work. Second, after the moles and false intelligence of the fifties and other failures, the US gradually lost interest in human sources and began depending on electronic, spy plane, and satellite data gathering. Unfortunately, those techniques could not tell us that Soviet missiles were falling apart in silos half filled with water, that missile submarines spent so much time in port not because the Soviets didn't trust their officers but because the subs were broken down, that a very large part of the Soviet GDP was either fictional or so defective that it might as well have been, and that the Soviets' military spending peaked in the mid-sixties and declined in real terms despite the large added costs of the confrontation with China and the Afghan war. American taxpayers and American society paid the huge cost in dollars of this mistake, but the book makes no attempt to discuss it, even though it has been widely documented since the end of the Cold War.

That aside, I think the history and portrayal of historic figures is interesting and pretty accurate. The plot is fun and exciting, even when you know how it is going to come out, and the episodic structure allows readers to enjoy an exciting yarn and still get to sleep at a decent hour.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Almost Brilliant
Review: I genuinely enjoyed reading this lengthy tome. It's quite a book, and the insertion of fictional characters and possible or probable events into real history helped give you the feeling that you were reading the real inside workings of the CIA. It also cleverly laid the blame for some CIA foibles at the feet of fictional characters, enabling the author to explore those events without risking the embarassment of any real people.

Unfortunately, two of the most pivotal historical American events that took place during my lifetime were whizzed past in this novel: the Viet Nam war and the assassination of John Kennedy. I guess some things are still too hot to touch.

I have one other minor complaint: the White House conversations involving former president Reagan rang false. I watched Reagan on television for eight years, and the figures and patterns of speech assigned to him in the novel didn't fit the reality I remember. He may really have been befuddled, as he is portrayed here, but he continued to speak publicly with confidence and authority even after the assassination attempt. I would have imagined him speaking just as well in an important meeting like the one imagined in the book.

For fans of the spy novel, cold war era, I would highly recommend this book. In addition, conspiracy buffs and fans of James Ellroy's American Tabloid and The Cold Six Thousand will probably enjoy this.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: An Epic Story
Review: I owned two copies of this book and even tried listening to an audio version before finally sitting down with a third copy (given to me by a friend who highly recommended the book) and pushed my way through it. Once I got past the first 50 or so pages, where I usually gave up before, the book had me hooked. Robert Littell has written an epic story detailing the rise of America's clandestine services, their early successes, and their eventual mis-steps that would lead to the rise of terrorists like Osama bin Laden. This is a spy novel like no other I've read. At times I found myself riveted to the page, shocked at some of the plot points. This turned out to be a great book and I can only kick myself for not reading it sooner.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Brilliant, Intriguing Work
Review: I truly enjoyed _The Company_, which was the first ~1,000 page novel that I absolutely could not put down. Littell did a brilliant job at combining an intriguing plot with historical fact.

Admittedly, I was entertained by Clancy's _Rainbow Six_, yet, this work was far deeper and engaging. Unlike Clancy's style, personality and psychology overshadow fancy technological gadgetry, which is likely more indicative of how the most prestigious government agency operates.

I am now a fan of the Littell spy novel. Keep them coming.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Comments on book's portrayal of real people
Review: This is a wonderful novel; of course it is fiction, but it portrays many real people. I worked off and on from 1950 to the early '90s with defense and intel groups,and although my contact with CIA was limited, I have personal views about some of the real people, and here comment on how my views match (or don't) Littell's portrayal. First, though, I must observe that neither CIA nor KGB was consistently as clever as the book portrays; like any large organization, CIA and KGB had very many people who were barely competent, if that, along with some who were superb, so the effectiveness of neither CIA nor KGB was as great as that of some less well-known intel groups in both countries that chose and trained fewer people and did it better. That's not a criticism, just an observation about big organizations. In particular, both CIA and KGB suffered greatly from their habit of posting people to assignments where they couldn't speak or understand the local languages and didn't know local customs and courtesies; I met a few of those in surprising places, and wondered what on earth their bosses thought they could achieve. OK, on to real people.

The portrayal of Bissell is perfect: a brilliant, hard-driving, opinionated risk-taker who didn't listen well to the views of others. (By the way, Bissell didn't fall on his sword after Bay of Pigs; he wound up with a responsible job that used his talent where he wouldn't do damage.) Richard Helms was much better than Littell's brief description would imply; Helms was indeed usually cautious, and could be bureaucratic, but he fought fiercely to make his considered judgment heard, and was perhaps the most effective person in CIA for many years. It's unfortunate that Kennedy didn't get Helms' carefully reasoned explanation of why Bay of Pigs wouldn't work; that was pigeonholed before it could get to Kennedy, and Kennedy had not yet learned to ask the questions that would have brought Helms' story to his attention.

Casey is well portrayed: a fervent patriot with lousy judgment. It's little known that Adm. Bobby Inman, Casey's deputy between Inman's time as NSA Director and Inman's subsequent career, resigned because some of Casey's operations were unacceptable to Inman. (I know this both from Inman and from others.) Angleton deserves better than the portrayal in this book; he was abrasive, eccentric and paranoid, hated by many CIA people, but he did many good things for CIA besides a few bad things. Angleton did not destroy the capability of CIA's Ops Directorate, although he did do a bit of damage to it. The more serious damage, however, was inflicted later by James Woolsey's well-intentioned but ill-advised starvation of humint to emphasize technical means. Tenet tried to repair this, and humint is getting better again now, but that takes time, and unfortunately wasn't far enough along for the Iraq conflict, so Tenet had to take the fall.

Littell portrays the KGB's inability to get the Politburo to recognize the facts of life about Afghanistan; I don't know whether Littell means to imply the CIA had the same problem about Viet Nam, but it did. In the late '60s I asked a senior US intel guy why US intel hadn't laid out for President Johnson the true state of affairs in Viet Nam, and he said, "We did, repeatedly, but he wouldn't listen; he didn't want to hear it." A perennial problem for intel shops is that national leaders (and top military people) often don't want to hear what the intel people have to say, for reasons having to do with problems of policy and of leadership; in the US, CIA and other intel shops often get badmouthed for not providing good analyses when in fact they did, but were ignored. I can think of only two post-WW-II Presidents who listened carefully to intel assessments that cast doubts on the President's policy of the time.

I know little about Giancana, but I'm surprised if he was as foulmouthed and ignorant as Littell portrays; the few people I have known who were "managers" in organizations that systematically broke our criminal laws had to deal with the "respectable" world, and behaved in a way acceptable to those they dealt with; they left it to their goons to be grossly uncouth.

I noted a couple of very minor errors in Littell's description of routine CIA procedures at Langley, but nothing major. All told, he has achieved a remarkably good book; if my comments above seem to conflict with some of Littell's characterizations, keep in mind that there are many knowledgeable people who would agree with Littell and not with me, or who would disagree with both of us.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the best and most all encompassing spy novels ever
Review: This remarkable book captures the history of the CIA during the cold war from it's early days in post W.W.II Berlin to the downfall of the Gorbachev government. The Yugoslavian revolution, the Kim Philby affair, the Bay of Pigs fiasco, as well as the Iran Contra scandal are also covered in some detail. These separate episodes are kept together by a group of CIA operatives that we get to know quite well. As the time frame of the story is in decades, the characters are multigenerational. As is appropriate, we do not get to know these CIA agents intimately but get to know them more by their deeds and their dialogue. Nonetheless, the characters are suffused with a great deal of humanity. We deal with loss of love, death, honor, as well as, what compels an individual to betray their country.
THE COMPANY is one of the longest and biggest books I have ever read. It is also one of the best. If there weren't so many other books to read on my shelves, I am not sure I would have ever wanted it to end. It has been nominated by the CWA for multiple daggers including the Gold Dagger and the Steel Dagger. This bears testimony for the quality of the book in that it is so long, yet the judges were able and willing to get through it. One would be hard pressed to find a better and more all encompassing spy novel than this one.


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