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Spy for No Country

The Story of Ted Hall, the Teenage Atomic Spy Who May Have Saved the World

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

At 18 years of age, Theodore Hall was the youngest physicist on the Manhattan Project, hired as a junior at Harvard and put to work at Los Alamos in 1944. Assigned the job of testing and refining the complex implosion system for the plutonium bomb, Hall was described as "amazingly brilliant" by his superiors on the project, many of whom were Nobel Prize winners. But what Hall's colleagues didn't know was that the teenaged Hall was also the youngest spy taken on by the Soviet Union in search of secrets to the atomic bomb. Spy With No Country tells the gripping story of a brilliant scientist whose information about the plutonium bomb, including detailed drawings and measurements, proved to be integral to the Soviet's development of nuclear capabilities.

In the dying days of World War II, defeat of the Third Reich became a matter of when, not if. Tensions between wartime allies America and the Soviet Union began to rise, and things only got hotter when the United States refused to share information on its nuclear program. This groundbreaking book paints a nuanced picture of a young man acting on what he thought was best for the world. Neither a Communist nor a Soviet sympathizer, Hall worked to ensure that America did not monopolize the science behind the atomic bomb, which he felt may have apocalyptic consequences. Instead, by providing the Soviets with the secrets of the bomb, and thereby initiating "mutual assured destruction," Hall may have actually saved the world as we know it. But his contributions to the Soviets certainly did not go unnoticed. FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover opened an investigation into Hall, which was escalated when it was discovered that Hall's brother Edward was a rising star of the Air Force, leading the development of intercontinental ballistic missiles.

Featuring in-depth research from recently declassified FBI documents, first-hand journals, and personal interviews, investigative journalist Dave Lindorff uncovers the story of the atomic spy who gave secrets away, and got away with it, too.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 16, 2023
      Journalist and documentarian Lindorff (Marketplace Medicine) presents a riveting portrait of Ted Hall (1925–1999), who during WWII stole crucial data from America’s Los Alamos nuclear-bomb research center and delivered it to the Soviet Union. A brilliant young physicist, Hall was plucked out of Harvard at age 18 and arrived at the Manhattan Project laboratories in New Mexico in early 1944, where he worked under scientific director J. Robert Oppenheimer. Thinking that “it would be proper and important for America’s wartime ally, the Soviet Union, to be included” in the creation of the atomic bomb and hoping to “prevent its use after the war ended should the United States be the only nation possessing it,” Hall travelled to New York and presented himself to the Russian consulate. He then returned to Los Alamos, and for several months passed information to the consulate via his former Harvard roommate Saville Sax. After the war, Hall went back to civilian life as a graduate student and researcher, moving in 1962 to an academic post at Cambridge University in England. News did not break that he had been a Manhattan Project spy for the Soviets until five years before his death. Espionage buffs and fans of the movie Oppenheimer will savor Lindorff’s extensive scrutiny of this real-life cloak-and-dagger tale.

    • Kirkus

      October 15, 2023
      Biography of a physicist who spied for the Soviet Union and was never arrested. Ted Hall (1925-1999) was a prodigy, admitted to Harvard to study physics at 16 and recruited for the Manhattan Project in 1944 at 18. Investigative journalist Lindorff reminds readers that at this time, the Soviets and Americans were allies. American media extolled the heroics of the Red Army, which suffered enormously and fought stubbornly during the Nazi invasion, and portrayed Stalin as a benign leader. Although never a communist, writes the author, Hall believed "that the United States, with a monopoly on the atomic bomb, would pose a dire threat to the other nations of the world. His fear that the United States would use its devastating power to dominate the globe unless prevented by another nation with a similar weapon was not misplaced." As a spy, historians agree, Hall delivered technical plans for a bomb identical to the one the Soviets tested in 1949. A suspicious FBI investigated him for years but stopped, Lindorff theorizes, on orders from the Air Force because revealing Hall's espionage would force it to fire his brother, the "director of the entire USAF ballistic missile development program." Hall's espionage did not become public knowledge until 1995. Lindorff concludes the book with highly unflattering views of postwar America, including the anticommunist hysteria of the 1950s. He maintains that the U.S. planned a preemptive strike against the Soviet Union before it could develop its own bomb, but was foiled when the Soviets succeeded with their project so quickly. "It's likely," he writes, "that Ted Hall's spying effort did prevent the nightmare of a U.S. monopoly on nuclear weapons and a genocidal nuclear attack against the Soviet people in the early 1950s." A carefully documented life story, though Lindorff's contention that Hall "saved the world" may strike readers as overstated.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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