Spies of No Country

Spies of No Country

- Matti Friedman

Award-winning writer Matti Friedman’s tale of four Israeli spies who became the founding members of Mossad, Israel’s vaunted intelligence agency. These four spies were all Jewish, born in Arab countries, who went undercover in Beirut in 1948. This story is the history of the creation of Mossad as well as Israel’s own complicated history.

Author: Matti Friedman - Canadian Israeli Journalist and author. In 1995, he immigrated to Israel and served in the IDF before becoming an AP Journalist. Later in his career, he drew attention with a pair of essays that criticized the media and called out their anti-Israel bias, including the AP.

REVIEWS

"Spies of No Country: Israel's Secret Agents at the Birth of the Mossad by Matti Friedman is a riveting spy adventure story - except it’s all true and it’s all stories from first-person interviews and archive records that have never been shared.

If learning about the Mossad, or Israel’s beginnings, or even how words like "chalas" and "ya'ani" became part of the spoken Hebrew language is interesting to you, this book is a gem. Like Harry Potter traveling with Dumbledore to the past, Matti Friedman recreates the scenes of the day through notes and maps and a vivid attention to detail to literally bring you onto the streets and into the minds of Israel’s first spies, before the Mossad was even an idea. This book also provides a seeing-glass into Israel’s current problems and their origins. Reading this book will bring you a new perspective on the country.

With no playbook or predecessors to guide the way, Matti Friedmann shows us how four people and their unit played monumental roles in the creation of Israel. He unfolds the story by taking us into the people as human beings, so in a very real way we become part of Israel’s history. He also shares the many incredible and devastating actions carried out so that Israel could exist today.

How did a country surrounded by enemies, who were far greater and far more experienced than her, survive and thrive? And where did the problems within that country that now scream at the forefront of the political scene emerge from? Matti Friedmann addresses all of this in a well-written page-turner that I highly recommend! I have read lots of Mossad books and watched a lot of documentaries on the subject and all of the information in this book was new, interesting, and extremely important in understanding the foundations of Israel today."

Leah Aguirre

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