Senior wants to draw attention...to the hideous damage these men inflicted ... Senior highlights the Cambridge spies’ hypocrisy and malevolence whenever she can — a hostile approach that’s justified, if occasionally repetitive. Sometimes she dials up the charges before having to walk bits of them back ... But the narrative picks up pace in the last third, after the war ends, when defectors from the Soviet Union threaten to blow the Apostles’ covers. The story moves briskly, as the spies play a hair-raising game of trying to serve their masters in Moscow while the walls start closing in.
A soup-to-nuts history of the Cambridge spies that is as good as anything I have read ... What marks it out, quite apart from its lively prose and absorbing pace, is the contempt in which the author holds her protagonists ... Senior’s magnificent book will consign such romantic notions to the dustbin of history. The truth about the Cambridge spies is now plain for all to see: they were monsters.
More than most scholars, Senior emphasizes that these were loathsome men who worshiped a monster and caused suffering and death, not only to other spies but to masses of innocent civilians. A darkly fascinating account of an infamous spy ring.
Labyrinthine ... Elegantly written and stocked with charismatic, spectacularly flawed characters, it’s a captivating, psychologically probing spy saga.