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Clever Girl

Elizabeth Bentley, the Spy Who Ushered in the McCarthy Era

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available

Communists vilified her as a raging neurotic. Leftists dismissed her as a confused idealist. Her family pitied her as an exploited lover. Some said she was a traitor, a stooge, a mercenary and a grandstander. To others she was a true American heroine—fearless, principled, bold and resolute. Congressional committees loved her. The FBI hailed her as an avenging angel. The Catholics embraced her. But the fact is, more than half a century after she captured the headlines as the "Red Spy Queen," Elizabeth Bentley remains a mystery.

New England-born, conservatively raised, and Vassar-educated, Bentley was groomed for a quiet life, a small life, which she explored briefly in the 1920s as a teacher, instructing well-heeled young women on the beauty of Romance languages at an east coast boarding school. But in her mid-twenties, she rejected both past and future and set herself on an entirely new course. In the 1930s she embraced communism and fell in love with an undercover KGB agent who initiated her into the world of espionage. By the time America plunged into WWII, Elizabeth Bentley was directing the operations of the two largest spy rings in America. Eventually, she had eighty people in her secret apparatus, half of them employees of the federal government. Her sources were everywhere: in the departments of Treasury and Commerce, in New Deal agencies, in the top-secret OSS (the precursor to the CIA), on Congressional committees, even in the Oval Office.

When she defected in 1945 and told her story—first to the FBI and then at a series of public hearings and trials—she was catapulted to tabloid fame as the "Red Spy Queen," ushering in, almost single-handedly, the McCarthy Era. She was the government’s star witness, the FBI’s most important informer, and the darling of the Catholic anti-Communist movement. Her disclosures and accusations put a halt to Russian spying for years and helped to set the tone of American postwar political life.

But who was she? A smart, independent woman who made her choices freely, right and wrong, and had the strength of character to see them through? Or was she used and manipulated by others? Clever Girl is the definitive biography of a conflicted American woman and her controversial legacy. Set against the backdrop of the political drama that defined mid-twentieth century America, it explores the spy case whose explosive domestic and foreign policy repercussions have been debated for decades but not fully revealed—until now.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 2, 2003
      Kessler (The Happy Bottom Riding Club: The Life and Times of Pancho Barnes) gamely attempts to create a true-life romantic spy-thriller from the life of Elizabeth Bentley, who in 1945 confessed to being a Soviet spy, implicated Julius Rosenberg and many others and set America off on its journey through McCarthyism. Unfortunately, Kessler's attempt to draw tension and romance from Bentley's life fails amid a clutter of cameos, unexplored details and a superficial rendering of early Communist history in the U.S. Bentley is certainly an intriguing subject. A descendant of Puritans and educated at Vassar, she joined the Communist Party while a graduate student at Columbia in the Depression. She soon became a covert agent and fell in love with her KGB contact, Jacob Golos. When Golos died in her apartment and Bentley's position with the Russians deteriorated, she reached out to the FBI. Kessler is a fine writer, but her subjects just don't cooperate. Bentley's "romance" with the homely, secretive Golos is hardly romantic, and much early American Communist history is still obscured beneath the shroud of secrecy under which it operated. Finally, Bentley appears to have left little behind to aid in reliably reconstituting her life. Despite Kessler's best efforts, the result falls short as spy thriller, as biography and as history. 8 pages of b&w photos not seen by PW. Agent, Sandy Dijkstra.
      (Aug. 8)
      Forecast:There seems to be a minor revival of interest in Bentley. Last October, the University of North Carolina Press published another biography,
      Red Spy Queen by Kathryn Olmstead.

    • Library Journal

      May 1, 2003
      By the mid-1930s, the Russians had discovered that it was relatively easy to spy on Americans in our open society. Like countless others, Elizabeth Bentley, a New Englander educated at Vassar College, became a committed Communist in response to the economic inequities so apparent in Depression-era America. She fell in love with a Russian agent and during the early 1940s began providing secret government documents to her Soviet mentors as their spy named "clever girl." When her lover suddenly died, Bentley was no longer considered reliable by the Soviets, who marginalized her. The heartbroken Bentley contacted the FBI in 1945 and began exposing her fellow spies. The Rosenbergs were just two of the dozens she fingered during her testimony before congressional committees. Kessler, who directs the graduate program in Literary Nonfiction at the University of Oregon, has written a spellbinding tale of a woman who fell prey to her idealism and was then swept up in the furor of the Red Scare. This book is a worthy complement to Marcia and Thomas Mitchell's recent The Spy Who Seduced America, which told a similar tale about Judith Coplon. Recommended for most collections. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 4/15/03.]-Ed Goedeken, Iowa State Univ. Lib., Ames

      Copyright 2003 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Library Journal

      April 15, 2003
      It only sounds like fiction: Bentley, known as the "Red Spy Queen," ran two successful spy rings in America and handed off U.S. secrets to her lover in the KGB. Then she turned coat and starting naming names, setting back Soviet espionage for years. Kessler is the author of numerous books, including the best-selling The Happy Bottom Riding Club. With a six-city author tour.

      Copyright 2003 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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