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Flirting with Danger: The Mysterious Life of Marguerite Harrison, Socialite Spy

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The true story of socialite spy Marguerite Harrison, who slipped behind enemy lines in Russia and Germany in the fraught period between the world wars

Foreign correspondent. Author. Filmmaker. Spy. Marguerite Harrison was born into Gilded Age American privilege and launched a successful career as a culture writer for the Baltimore Sun as a young widow. But when America entered World War I, Harrison secretly applied for a position in intelligence.

She was sent undercover into Germany after the armistice. With her society connections and gift for languages, Harrison delivered reports of mounting tensions and the growing power of the German right, and returned home an unsung heroine.

Harrison next fought for an intelligence posting in the newly formed Soviet Union. Posing as a reporter sympathetic to the Communist cause, she entered the USSR and was soon caught and jailed as a spy. Set the terrifying task of becoming a double agent for the Soviets, she strove to remain loyal to America.

In both places, Harrison saw the future --a second war with Germany, a cold war with the Soviets--and was little believed back home. Janet Wallach captures Harrison's daring and glamour in this stranger-than-fiction history of a socialite drawn to the impossible.

322 pages, Hardcover

First published August 8, 2023

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Janet Wallach

19 books39 followers

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5 stars
148 (27%)
4 stars
192 (36%)
3 stars
140 (26%)
2 stars
39 (7%)
1 star
10 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 77 reviews
47 reviews1 follower
August 23, 2023
I had two reactions to this book. On one hand, it was fascinating to read about Marguerite Harrison's adventures in the Mideast, Asia and USSR. She was a reporter who also spied for the U.S. military, was an interpid traveler adept at meeting and interviewing people (Ataturk, Trotsky, Chicherin and many more), and was able to gather critical information for the U.S. She was extraordinarily brave (some would say foolhardy) -- for example, crossing illegally into Soviet territory twice in the 1920s, and ending up in prison for it both itmes.

On the other hand, the book is disappointing. There's too much filler -- multiple, detailed descriptions of what Marguerite packed in her suitcases, or all of the courses at various dinners, etc.

And there's too little attention to key questions. For example, the author tells us that Marguerite came from a very wealthy Baltimore family, was traveling when her beloved Dad died, and had to deal with his estate when she came home. We learn that she was in debt after her husband died, and that she and her sister sold the family home and split the $$. If her family was wealthy, what happened to the rest of her Dad's estate? We learn that she contracted TB and a collapsed lung during her travels -- but then the author tells us she was off again on another adventure. Where and how did she recover? The author tells us that when she was arrested in the Soviet Union, the Cheka (secret police) blackmailed her into informing on others -- so what happened to the people she informed on?

I wish the author had done more research, and had at least addressed these issues even if some of the information is incomplete.
Profile Image for Candace.
651 reviews77 followers
March 22, 2023
3.5 stars, rounded up

If Marguerite Harrison's adventures were not so well documented, they would be impossible to believe. Janet Wallach's "Flirting with Danger"is highly entertaining and swift-moving: tons of fun to read and imagine.

Marguerite was a Baltimore widow, from a wealthy family but in need of work to keep her busy and support her child. She started writing for the Baltimore Sun around the start of the first world war but grew bored with the stuff women got to write about at the time. With a well-devised plan and perfect German, she secretly applied to Military Intelligence to go to Germany toward the end of the war, but the Armistice put an end to that idea. She neatly pivoted to offer her services to find out what Germans were thinking and to report on the influence of Communism as people looked to Russia for a possible next step. She was blisteringly successful, able to dine with the wealthy and go bumming in poor districts, her natural warmth and charm encouraging people of all classes to open up to her. She returned to Baltimore something of a national heroine, but was again relegated to the society column. Marguerite offered her service to MI in 1920, offering to go to Russia in the chaotic period following the Russian Revolution. They accept, but she has to get into Russia herself.

Her insight and ability to connect with people make Mrs. Harrison the perfect correspondent/spy, and her truly awesome language skills enable her to use that gift to the max.

"Flirting with Danger" is a misnomer. Marguerite Harrison jumped into danger with both feet and was aware of what she was doing every second. A widow in her forties who had never known discomfort, who put her son in a Swiss boarding school for six months and didn't pick him up for several years, her writing about post-WWI Germany is on point in warning of what was to come. Her Russian reporting was especially important because so few foreigners made it into, or out of, the country. It would have been useful to have some idea about what spurred her to launch herself into these adventures. Her reporting was impeccable and insightful but often not given the weight it deserved because it was written by a woman.

This is an engrossing adventure story about a remarkable woman. The story would have more depth if Janet Wallach had explored what made Marguerite tick, what gave her the guts and the smarts to do these things and survive. Even without that, this is a cracking good read.

Thanks to Netgalley and the publisher for access to this remarkable biography.
August 12, 2023
Flirting with Danger by Janet Wallach is a non-fiction book. I will say straight out that I thought it was a terrible read. I was interested in the book initially because the Marguerite Harrison was a socialite turned spy after WWI. There were so many instances where Marguerite would travel from one place to another without any explanation of how she got there. There were numerous times where she befriended a person to get information from them. Every time she succeeds with no idea how she achieved this end. From what I can tell Marguerite Harrison had zero training in espionage. I am not sure of her God given talents but she surely was not invisible. I don’t know the volume of information available on Marguerite Harrison so I can’t even say that it was well researched. I surmise that there wasn’t enough information to build a good biography. I felt there was not enough information to connect the reader to the subject. All it left me with was disappointment and lots of questions.

I would like to thank Doubleday Books and NetGalley for the ARC in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Amy.
913 reviews26 followers
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September 2, 2023
Adventurous doesn't mean progressive. The book seems to adopt Harrison's viewpoints without examining how those viewpoints were the product of her class, race, and nationality. Even for beach-read-level history, this is too credulous for my taste. By page 65, I found myself hate-reading it, so, DNF.

Little questions started to nag me right away. Harrison's family made its fortune in "the shipping industry" of 19th century Baltimore. Sounds like they were likely profiting at some point from the sale of human beings. If not, why not say so? I found myself nagged by more questions as I read that Harrison admired Woodrow Wilson, and that Harrison spent a week doing men's jobs at a shipbuilding site, receiving praise that totally ignored the centuries of Black women doing equally demanding physical labor. I understand that Harrison's work, then and later, wasn't about race in the US, but I began to form a picture of a woman who was invested in a belief system that she was content to leave unexamined. What kind of reporting could she do?

When Harrison spends time in Berlin in 1919 on, this perspective became unreadable. I assume that the homophobia in the descriptions of Berlin's cultural life was Harrison's, not the author's, but an editor should have suggested that the book make that distance explicit. Military intelligence was obviously using Harrison for her socialite connections to Germany's reactionary elite--okay, that's in the title, and I shouldn't complain that Harrison lacked expertise as a journalist and basic competence as a spy. But I was increasingly uncomfortable, especially as her travels took her to Poland and Lithuania.

I wish the book had asked questions about where Harrison fits in a broader story of espionage and nationalism from WWI through the Cold War (and maybe still). A small group of men, generally sharing the same worldview and class anxieties, recruited women mostly from the same class and manipulated them into endangering themselves in order to confirm the biases that decisionmakers already had. Even back then, wasn't anyone wondering whether any of these people knew what they were doing?

I really wanted to read about Harrison's adventures in the Middle East, especially because an introductory chapter led me to believe she at least wouldn't share the Islamophobia of today's conservatives. But I couldn't stand any more of her crashing around the world, name dropping and overestimating her own abilities. She was becoming a caricature. A different book might have helped her earn my respect or at least compassion. As it is, I kept thinking of Ivanka Trump presenting herself as a peer of Angela Merkel--nope.
Profile Image for Suzy S.
259 reviews
November 25, 2023
An engaging book (even for fiction readers!) about an incredible life. Marguerite Harrison was raised as a Baltimore socialite and went on to write for the Baltimore Sun and spy for the US in Germany, the Soviet Union, Japan, China and Mongolia and then “for fun” did the tribal migration across Persia. All between 1918-1925! Incredible.

Wallach’s well-researched book brings Mrs. Harrison to life and aptly paints the turmoil in the post WW1 world.
Profile Image for Clay Olmstead.
185 reviews6 followers
November 23, 2023
Marguerite Harrison was an heiress and socialite who became an American spy in 1919. Over the next 7 years or so, she worked in Germany, Russia and the Middle East, gathering information for U.S. Military Intelligence. She personally experienced the beginnings of Naziism, Communism, and Arab independence. Much of what she did is lost to history, since she obviously didn't keep a diary, but the part that's known is a fascinating window into the people, politics and culture of those turbulent years.

I learned a lot, I just wish this book were better written: at times it's repetitive, other times important events are skipped over, and the timeline is jumbled for no apparant reason. When the author gets going though, the book roars along like the real life adventure story that it is, which makes the whole thing worth reading.
Profile Image for Brendan (History Nerds United).
597 reviews269 followers
June 19, 2023
I often find when I dislike a non-fiction book about an interesting person, the reason is because there is not enough facts to build out a compelling narrative. In essence, these books should become novels to allow the author the latitude to avoid the problem of "telling instead of showing." I believe Janet Wallach's "Flirting with Danger" is an example of this conundrum.

The book follows the espionage activities of Marguerite Harrison after World War I. Harrison certainly found herself in many interesting situations but so many of these situations (to quote Seinfeld) are "yadda yaddaed" away. Numerous times, we are told Harrison befriended someone and got information out of them. Her methods are never explained and the reader is left asking who is Harrison and what drives her. Additionally, Wallach shows no negative side of Harrison and barely criticizes her decisions. To avoid a mild spoiler, I will say that her natural talents of spycraft were probably fine, but she clearly had inadequate training in avoiding attention and not being discovered. Ultimately, there is not enough in the narrative to connect with Harrison and the reader is left with a dizzying amount of names and a lot of questions about perspective.

(This book was provided as an advance copy by Netgalley and Doubleday Books.)
Profile Image for Fred Jenkins.
Author 2 books11 followers
September 9, 2023
Harrison is certainly a fascinating character, although the book is uneven. Wallach is right to focus on her spying and travels, but does leave gaps you could drive a truck through. For example, what happened to her father's fortune that she was so often short of the ready? There is also a lot of filler, as other GR readers have noted. Do we really care about the minutiae of her cosmetics and furnishings? (An exception being her time in the Lubyanka, when all the details are of interest). Forty pages of trivia could easily have been jettisoned.

It was interesting to learn about pre-WWII American espionage; most of what I knew about previously was Wild Bill Donovan and the OSS. Several of my old college profs were spies or codebreakers; see Allen's Classical Spies.

Overall, it is an adequately researched and mostly entertaining book.
Profile Image for Jordyn.
152 reviews
March 10, 2024
Listen. I had issues with enough of this book that I had a coherent thought, which was not pleasant for me so it won't be pleasant for my legions of fans on here either.

First of all, far too much propaganda. I get it, WW2 bad. Pretty much universally agreed upon by sane people. Not agreed upon? Nationalism and socialism presenting the same imminent threats modern day. That is just simply not true, and also not getting you favors with the feds. Moving on.

This is a very specific type of girlboss energy that I cannot stand. I for one, love stories of women who did things better than men AND I love a historical story moment. How could this have flopped?? For reasons I will never understand, authors of books about "first" women (first to space, first spy, etc etc) use this extremely condescending and palatable feminism to describe their lives and stories.

Typically done in one of three ways, and this had them all: the "women can be just as violent and tasteless as men", the "she was a girl and used her feminine wiles to be good at something", or the "and in the end, she got married and lived as a homemaker". Don't do that. Women are objectively better than men at lots of things (sorry boys), just talk about that.

Anyway, she got a star for writing it in the first place. And one more for a single particularly funny line.
Profile Image for Elaine Ruth Boe.
606 reviews33 followers
November 8, 2023
An incredibly absorbing, well-paced thriller about one woman who clearly needed therapy for her restlessness and inclination for putting herself in danger and avoiding emotional attachments after losing her husband. This reads like fiction because so much of what Harrison did sounds impossible to survive (Russian prisons, desert treks). While I couldn't help but think much of her wanderlust was a shield against intimacy, that made for a fascinating book! And to Wallach's credit, she notes Harrison's absence in her son's life but doesn't explicitly characterize her as a "bad mother." I'd love to see this turned into a movie. It was also enlightening to hear about the political climate post-WWI and how Harrison in many ways anticipated the conflicts, resentments, and prejudices that contributed to WWII. Also, so much of what she accomplished was into her 40s and beyond; love an alluring female protagonist past her 20s!
Profile Image for Jenna.
1,928 reviews21 followers
December 27, 2023
I had read this writer's previous book "Desert Queen" which I liked. This one wasn't on my radar but I saw the author at the 2023 National Bookfest and she was very interesting. Of course, she was promoting this, her newest book.
It was an interesting story on a female spy who has probably been lost in the pages of history.
And what makes it a bit more important is that unlike some others, she does get caught & spent many years in prisons for spying (specifically in Russia) which you don't really read about very often.
I'd recommend this if you're interesting in history, non-fiction in general, spies or women's history.
44 reviews
December 29, 2023
Fascinating book! Marguerite Harrison truly was a woman before her time. Born into a wealthy family (her father was a shipping magnate), Marguerite uses the skills she acquired in her youth (languages, business, social, writing etc...) and applies them to life as a spy. A true story, the book follows her adventures from 1919 - 1924. Her job as a newspaper reporter allows her to go undercover as a spy. Even under the worst circumstances Marguerite finds beauty. She was a remarkable woman. I needed to refer to maps continuously while reading the book in order to appreciate the magnitude of her travels.

Profile Image for Nicole.
404 reviews4 followers
March 11, 2024
I really enjoyed this. What a fascinating and exceptional woman. The places she traveled and the things she did, at a time when such things were Not! Done! Just amazing. I’m so glad her story has been unearthed, pieced together, and immortalized.
35 reviews1 follower
January 24, 2024
Interesting period between WWI and WWII from a spy perspective but not nearly as compelling as other women wartime spy books.
609 reviews
December 2, 2023
Marguerite Harrison, an American socialite in Baltimore, became a US spy when she was about 40, after her husband died. She craved travel and global excitement, and she talked American Military Intelligence into letting her use her press credentials to obtain overseas information for the US Government. While writing feature stories for the Baltimore Sun and other publications, she "infiltrated" groups in Germany, the Soviet Union, the Middle East and China during a frenetic five year period immediately after World War I. During this time, she was in and out of the Soviet prison, the Lubyanka. She took senseless risks but was invaluable to her "employer". She was lucky she survived.

During the most detailed and well documented part of the book, she spied for the US during the Paris peace talks after World War I. Her job was to surveil the atmosphere in Germany, as Britain and France (against Woodrow Wilson' wishes) negotiated brutal reparations for the people of Germany as part of the forthcoming peace. Her job got more dangerous (and Harrison welcomed danger) when she spent time in Russia courting Soviet displeasure, but producing revealing reports on Bolshevik activities for her US handlers.

Janet Wallach is to be congratulated for discovering the fascinating Marguerite Harrison (while she was writing a book about Gertrude Bell) and for her persistance in getting so deep into the heroine's story. I noticed some occasional mistakes and confusion. And there were moments when I wished I was being given more details. However, the subject was certainly elusive from time to time.

The book ends about the time Harrison married again, this time to an American who also loved to travel. The couple spend a great deal of their time overseas, but Wallach says no one knows if she continued to spy. Sounded like kind of a cop-out to me. I wondered if Wallach tired of Harrison and didn't want to continue researching the rest of her story. Perhaps that's unfair, but this intriguing biography essentially ended well before its subject died. Wallach summarizes the last forty years of Harrison's life in just a few pages.
932 reviews4 followers
January 26, 2024
So, here’s the thing about biographies like this one — the subject is a remarkable, fascinating woman who sounds like she would’ve been amazing to know … BUT a fairly large percentage of what she did, day to day, doesn’t make for a great story. Marguerite Harrison was an American socialite who, through a variety of circumstances (early death of her husband, relative lack of interest in her son, high social standing, personal charm, beauty) was able to insinuate herself into many important events around the end of World War 1. She got into a lot of trouble over it in Russia, where they were trying to work out whether the Bolsheviks were gonna run the country and when they did, they didn’t take kindly to anyone who seemed like they might undermine them … which included Marguerite, who was feeding information about the country to American military intelligence. She ended up in a notorious Russian prison, obviously not ideal. Sure enough, her contributions to that knowledge and the larger ideas at play in early 20th century Europe are fascinating. But there’s also a lot of Marguerite taking this train to that place, working out how to get from place to place, who to convince to put her in touch with that important man. There is also the ongoing story of betrayal with her friend (whose name escapes me ATM), which is its own kind of drama. In general, I think comprehensive biographies end up telling us stuff we don’t necessarily need to know which get in the way of the more interesting stuff, but a biographer of a relatively minor figure like this faces a dilemma — how do I tell her story without helping readers understand how she got there, even though many of the details aren’t inherently interesting. I think that’s this book’s major flaw, and it’s hard to be too critical of the author because of it, it just comes with the territory for this type of biography. It’s worth reading if you’re into the period (as I am) or you can’t get enough of a citizen spy, but it really dragged on and on.

Grade: B
Profile Image for Gail .
196 reviews7 followers
April 6, 2023
Flirting with Danger is a fascinating read about the life of Marguerite Harrison who came from a privileged American family and was basically groomed to get married and become a socialite.
Marguerite’s mother wanted her daughter to marry well and each time she got close, Marguerite thwarted the romances and eventually defied her parents and picked her own husband. She goes on to have a son and is unfortunately widowed at a young age, and that is when the book takes off and the reader is whisked into her life as a spy and a great adventurer.

Janet Wallach does a fine job of giving us intimate insight into Marguerite’s life, as she starts her career in Germany as WWI comes to an end. Her ease with languages becomes a great asset to her as she is able to easily move in many powerful circles around the globe and among common people as she is a keen observer and interested in the lives of ordinary people. She is no snob, and in many ways her roll-with-it attitude saves her from many hardships.

This book is fascinating as it gives the reader so much personal information and makes you feel you are a witness alongside Marguerite. Her lust for living was great and her adventures were so unique; I am sure they never happened again. Wallach celebrates her keen observations and really gives us the good, the bad, and the ugly of her life and choices.

I really enjoyed this book and could have read more. What a great character. Women did pave the way for some many amazing things, although their accomplishments were diminished. I thank Janet Wallach for bringing Marguerite’s life to light, as I would never have found her unless I read this book.

Please read this book if you want to learn about the world after WWI, the aftermath and life as it was then. Fun read, truly enjoyable and insightful.
Profile Image for Nancy.
Author 7 books16 followers
August 6, 2023
The Adventurous Life of a Socialite Spy

In the Gilded Age society was more structured than it is today. Young ladies in upper-class families were expected to marry well, have children, and pursue social obligations. Marguerite Harrison was not interested in conforming. She rejected the suitor her mother had chosen and married a man she loved. When he died, she was left with large debts and a young child. The solution was to go to work.

She started as a society reporter, but craving more action she applied to Military Intelligence to go to Europe as a spy. Her social skills and background opened doors to people in high places and her perceptive reports were very valuable. Eventually, her work as a spy took her Russia, a stint in prison, and travels to the Mideast and beyond.

I found her story fascinating. She didn’t conform to the strictures places on women between the two world wars and had adventures and escapes that would have daunted many men. The book is well researched, but it reads like an action adventure. Because it’s non-fiction we don’t get into her head trying to understand motivation, but the story is riveting none the less. It’s interesting to see how she was able to use the skills learned in an upper-class family to become successful as a secret agent.

Thanks to the published and Net Galley for this review copy.

Profile Image for Paterson Dave.
10 reviews
November 4, 2023
for some reason, i requested a book about marguerite harrison,
a society deb turned international spy

it is called 'flirting with danger', by janet wallach

the story is supposedly true.
she was imprisoned in russia twice for being an american spy,
knew several languages and met and impressed gertrude bell,
as well as winston churchill and several other international who's who
candidates. i am 80% through with the book and can't put it down
until my eyes get blurry.
a hundred years ago, she and merian cooper, maker of king kong,
and shorty schoedsack searched 'persia' for the bakhtiar tribe of wild people,
and they made a documentary with her, called,
'grass: a nation's battle for life', which is actually on Kanopy,
free with library card registration in many cities.

i've been trying to stop recommending books and movies
because almost nobody ever takes up my choices, but
this one is really good book and i will be watching the movie soon, too
10.7k reviews175 followers
July 27, 2023
An amazing life. Marguerite Harrison lived large- at first thanks to her parents and later due to her own, let's face it, impulses. Her family had money, lots of money, most of which it later lost but for the relevant time frame, it cushioned her, A single semester at college went awry so off to Europe where she met her husband, who dies tragically, leaving her with a son and lots of debt. This sets off her adventures as a reporter who doubled as a spy in Europe. This is a little explored element of WWI and Wallach has detailed Harrison's exploits,. Thanks to netgalley for the ARC. This is a well done accounting of her life but know that as it's a biography, there's less emotion than there no doubt would have been had this been fiction. That said, it's a good look at an intriguing woman,
455 reviews1 follower
February 3, 2024
Flirting with danger hits solidly with its detailed description of travel and social norms of the first quarter of the 20th century. The biggest surprise was the fact a daring and financially independent young woman could bend conventions and drift from conservative to radical salons so easily. The movers and shakers who were reordering the western and middle eastern world following the cataclysm of the Great war frequented these circles. Devining and Influencing their opinions seems easier than one would expect.
This book provides many details of events, murky and lost to our time, that still influence current events. The tale is surprising, but in spite of prison and threats from fellow spies, not as riviting as the author's saga of Gertrude Bell.
Profile Image for Mark.
2,351 reviews26 followers
May 14, 2024
One of my favorite recent reads in the area of WWII history was Sonia Purnell's "A Woman of No Importance: The Untold Story of the American Spy Who Helped Win World War II," the fascinating story of Virginia Hall, a Baltimore socialite who goes on to lead a huge part of the French Resistance against the Nazi occupation, working both for Britain's SOE and later America's OSS which morphed into the CIA of today...Two decades earlier, another Baltimore socialite, Marguerite Harrison acting as a journalist spied for the US and its allies in Germany, the new Soviet Union, Japan and China between the wars...Not as edge of your seat as the Virginia Hill saga, but there must be something about Baltimore socialites and spying!
579 reviews2 followers
September 14, 2023
3.5 rounding down, the first half of the book to me was the more intriguing and interesting part and the 2nd half was a bit more mixed. Ms Harrison certainly led an adventuresome life, most of the exploits here all within an 8 year period from 1918 to 1926. The insights into early communist Russia were facinating and times, as was her sojourn to Japan as the Japanese sought to gain control of manchuria and flex their muscle against the rising Soviets. The final quarter of the book to me was the weakest - her travels across the middle east into what is today Iraq and Iran was a bit tedious and didn't really offer up a whole lot of meaningful insight (with a couple of exceptions).
Profile Image for Cecile.
93 reviews
January 18, 2024
I wanted to read this book because Marguerite Harrison was from my hometown and I erroneously thought she went to my school. I find it hard to relate to her or to place her. Few vestiges of her Gilded Age world remain in Baltimore.

The book focuses on her spy and filmmaking career, which lasted barely ten years. I wish there was more about her privileged childhood and her life in Los Angeles after spying. The most vivid episode to me is when she tried to look glamorous for the camera while following a nomadic “uncivilized” group. Otherwise, the portrayal of her risky life feels mostly dry and distant.
Profile Image for Jan.
5,701 reviews85 followers
July 21, 2023
Born an American socialite, widowed at 37, became the first female foreign intelligence agent for the United States government in 1918. As a wealthy socialite/journalist/linguist fluent in several European languages she had access to many political arenas and became a spy and later a double agent. She even became a writer/director/producer of a silent film and wrote her autobiography. Fantastic recounting of an amazing woman who defied the norms of her time.
I requested and received an EARC from Doubleday Books via NetGalley. Thank you
Profile Image for Sharon.
911 reviews2 followers
September 12, 2023
Marguerite was a member of high society and knew many important people. She was fluent in a number of languages and able to manage in several others. She was recruited at the end of WWI to go to Germany as a special correspondent for the Baltimore Sun and report to Washington all that she could find out about the feelings of the Germans about making peace. She was sent to a variety of countries as a socialite but to gather information in that role. She was imprisoned in the Lubyanka Prison while gathering information in Russia.
Profile Image for Stuart Miller.
300 reviews2 followers
September 29, 2023
An interesting account of the adventures of one of the first female spies to work for U.S. military intelligence from the end of WW I to the early 1930s. Harrison certainly had some incredible experiences, e.g., her account of imprisonment in the notorious Lubyanka prison in Moscow is hair-raising. It would have been useful for Wallach to examine the continued validity (or otherwise) of the books Harrison published on foreign affairs although the author does note several cases of Harrison's accurate foresight.
Profile Image for Nancy.
483 reviews3 followers
February 25, 2024
Marguerite Harrison had a life that can only be described as unbelievable. This woman had an amazingly adventurous spirit, was fearless, and never took no for an answer. She also had a very privileged life as a daughter of a shipping magnate. She crossed paths with so many high echelon people. Truly and amazing life. Three stars as there were gaps like what happened to her father's forture, how was she able to continue traveling when deathly ill, and a bit hard to stay with all of her wanderings.
Profile Image for Kemp.
364 reviews7 followers
June 2, 2024
I’m of a mixed opinion on this book – both good and bad.

I like reading about people who broke free of stereotypes and excelled where one isn’t expected to. Marguerite Harrison did things women of that era weren’t supposed, or allowed, to do. And that is an interesting read.

But it was way too detailed in the minutiae of wardrobe she wore, food she ate, and social activities without exactly getting to the how or why she excelled at collecting intelligence. No speculation into her motives. These sections read like a book report garnered from copious notes and diaries.
Profile Image for Ron Nurmi.
482 reviews4 followers
August 31, 2023
She had a wanderlust that drove her after the death of her first husband. She was an heiress to a shipping fortune and worked as a spy for the US Military in Germany, Poland, The Soviet Union, and who knows where else as she did not tell.

A story of adventure, privation, imprisonment, filmmaking, and other things.

She lives a "very interesting" life and is worth the short time spent reading.
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