Author:Henry Hemming
*** The Sunday Times bestseller ***
'Vividly imagined and prodigiously researched' Helen Davies, Sunday Times, Books of the Year
'Such a rewarding read' John Preston, Daily Mail, Books of the Year
'This odd, secretive man is brought to life', Robbie Millen, The Times, Books of the Year
Maxwell Knight was a paradox. A jazz obsessive and nature enthusiast (he is the author of the definitive work on how to look after a gorilla), he is seen today as one of MI5's greatest spymasters, a man who did more than any other to break up British fascism during the Second World War – in spite of having once belonged to the British Fascisti himself. He was known to his agents and colleagues simply as M, and was rumoured to be part of the inspiration for the character M in the James Bond series.
Knight became a legendary spymaster despite an almost total lack of qualifications. What set him apart from his peers was a mercurial ability to transform almost anyone into a fearless secret agent. He was the first in MI5 to grasp the potential of training female agents.
M is about more than just one man however. In its pages, Hemming reveals for the first time in print the names and stories of seven men and women recruited by Knight, on behalf of MI5, and then asked to infiltrate the most dangerous political organizations in Britain at that time. Until now, their identities have been kept secret outside MI5. Drawn from every walk of life, they led double lives—often at great personal cost—in order to protect the country they loved. With the publication of this book, it will be possible at last to celebrate the lives of these courageous, selfless individuals.
Drawing on declassified documents, private family archives and interviews with retired MI5 officers as well as the families of MI5 agents, M reveals not just the shadowy world of espionage but a brilliant, enigmatic man at its centre.
Fascinating biography ... Hemming has done a superb job
—— Ben Macintyre , The Times, 'Book of the Week'Excellent biography… The author has done a terrific job of unscrambling Knight’s muddled life
—— The Sunday TimesJaw-droppingly revelatory biography. *****
—— Mail on Sunday‘Compelling new biography… Hemming has done a wonderful espionage job of his own, scouring obscure files to bring long-hidden agents and their exploits to light. It is also a gripping portrait of an era, now long gone, when the establishment could accommodate such extravagant oddness.
—— Daily TelegraphHenry Hemming has found a peach of a subject... Full of new material, fresh interpretations and uncompromising integrity... He has managed the great feat of producing a rattling good read that is also a major piece of revisionist history
—— Richard Davenport-Hines , Wall Street JournalHemming has written a very readable, thoughtful and comprehensive account
—— Alan Judd , Literary ReviewI raced through Henry Hemming's book, constantly having to remind myself that it wasn't a work of fiction. It really has everything you'd want from a great espionage story: incredible agents risking their lives; the highest possible stakes, with the safety of the world hanging in the balance; and at its heart a complicated, mercurial spy master in Maxwell Knight spinning an ever more intricate web.
—— Matt Charman, Oscar-nominated screenwriter of 'Bridge of Spies'A major new biography
—— Mail on SundayEngaging and suspenseful
—— Financial TimesLively contribution to a maverick literature
—— The ObserverCrammed with cracking stories and founded on sound research, Henry Hemming’s biography of Maxwell Knight – ‘M’ – stands comparison with the bestselling books of Ben Macintyre.
—— Adam Sisman (Author of John Le Carré)Absolute proof that assiduous digging in the archives can produce scoops. This is intelligence research at its best, especially in the identification of hitherto anonymous agents. Definitely a great contribution to the literature.
—— Nigel West (Author of MI5)A fascinating portrait of a complex man. Espionage writing at its best.
—— Charles Cumming (Author of A Divided Spy)A cracking read, which both informs and entertains in equal measure.
—— Robin Handbury-Tenison , Country LifeHenry Hemming's excellent new life of Maxwell Knight [...] the most convincing, balanced and intricate biography of this extraordinary figure.
—— Alex Bughart , The Spectator‘A terrific life of the brilliant and eccentric spymaster’
—— The Sunday TimesA jaw-droppingly revelatory biography
—— EVENT magazine, Mail on SundayThe odd chap is brought to life
—— The TimesThis is a terrific book, well researched and superbly written
—— The Guardiana fascinating biography
—— Keith Simpson MP’s Summer Reading ListHemming tells a story of great interest, bringing to light the exploits of an eccentric and magnetic personality, a man able to keep his professional and private lives rigorously separate and who fully justifies his posthumous reputation
—— Catholic HeraldHemming gives an engrossing account of the remarkable life of a great eccentric
—— Daily MailLauren Elkin is one of our most valuable critical thinkers – the Susan Sontag of her generation
—— Deborah LevyThe acclaimed historian of Russia sweeps the brittle high society of pre-Revolutionary St Petersburg, the terror-chilled jails of Stalin's purges and the secrets of 1990s Moscow archives into a tragic panorama.'
—— INDEPENDENT, TEN OF THE HOTTEST BOOKS THIS SUMMERA seamlessly written and moving portrait of the soviet Union in miniature from the Revolution to the age of Yeltsin.
—— MAIL ON SUNDAYWhat is striking is how he has thrown himself heart and soul into the romance and emotion of his drama. The novel throbs with sex, maternal feeling, revolutionary fervour and terror ... Terrific stuff
—— SUNDAY TIMES