Review
“A superb biography … Alive to Sorge’s human flaws as much as to his professional competence, and with a salutary vein of anger running through it … More than a hundred books have been written about him and this is undoubtedly the best: detailed, wry, sympathetic and occasionally oddly moving” ―Ben Macintyre, The Times
“A fascinating biography … Owen Matthews tells the story of Sorge’s extraordinary life with tremendous verve and expertise and a real talent for mise en scène. Shanghai in the 1930s and prewar Tokyo, Sorge’s stamping grounds, come vividly alive in these pages and the portrait of Sorge himself that emerges is richly authentic” ―William Boyd, New Statesman
“Magnificently written … An Impeccable Spy is packed with humour and insight and all served up with a rare lightness of touch … Ben Macintyre and John le Carré fans alike will find themselves very much at home” ―Oliver Bullough, Observer
“Brilliant … A clear-eyed, deeply researched and finely-judged portrait” ―Saul David, Telegraph
“Gloriously readable… Every chapter of Matthews’s superbly researched biography reads like something from an Eric Ambler thriller.” ―Sunday Times
“Stalin’s Children should be required reading for anyone involved with economic, cultural or political relations with [Russia] … A poignant and insightful reading experience” ―praise for Stalin’s Children, New York Post
“An epic account … Brilliantly written” ―praise for Stalin’s Children, Guardian
“Few books say so much about Russia then and now, and its effect on those it touches” ―praise for Stalin’s Children, Economist
“A vividly told story, thoroughly researched and well-crafted … I love a thrilling spy story, especially one as superbly narrated as this, full of Bond-like drama about Sorge’s brushes with death, his love of fast cars and women.” ―The Financial Times
About the Author
Owen Matthews studied Modern History at Oxford University before beginning his career as a journalist in Bosnia. He has written for the Moscow Times, The Times, the Spectator and the Independent. In 1997, he became a correspondent at Newsweek magazine in Moscow where he covered the second Chechen war, Afghanistan, Iraq and the conflict in Eastern Ukraine. His first book on Russian history, Stalin’s Children, was translated into twenty-eight languages and shortlisted for The Guardian First Books Award and France’s Prix Médicis.