Member Reviews
I love a great spy read and ‘Miraflores’ did not disappoint. Fresh out of college and trying to distance himself from his father, Nick joins the CIA and is sent, rather quickly, to Panama to infiltrate a group of pro-Panama students trying to ensure Panama gains control of the canal from the US.
The story watches Nick as he works through his loneliness in a foreign country while trying to maintain his cover as a profesor. As his relationship with one of his students progresses he is forced to choose between his love and his mission.
While ultimately joining the CIA in defiance from his father, this story shows how family is important and parents will do anything to help their children not only succeed but also survive.
https://www.amazon.com/Miraflores-Memoir-Young-Spy-ebook/dp/B08L56LXVW/ref=mp_s_a_1_3?dchild=1&keywords=miraflores+memoir+of+a+young+spy&qid=1614289524&sprefix=miraflores&sr=8-3
Spy thrillers come in many shapes and sizes. It's a diverse genre. I will never forget the merciless irony of Graham Greene's Our Man In Havana, or the worryingly plausible The Tailor Of Panama by John le Carre. Both of them classics now. Novels I have read and re-read numerous times.
Miraflores is a fine novel. Nick Haliday is a rookie CIA agent, posing as an English literature professor, in Panama. It is the late 1950s. America fears the growing strength of the great Russian Bear.
A profoundly moving, intense depiction of loneliness and longing in a stunning spy setting. Worthy of classic status in the years ahead.
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Miraflores: Memories of a Young Spy by Keith Yocum is a historical fiction book following a young man’s first CIA assignment in Panama. Mr. Yocum is a seasoned writer and journalist.
Nick Halliday, a young college graduate, joins the newly established Central Intelligence Agency to fight against communism, as well as getting away from his troubled relationship with his father. Nick finds himself in the right place, in the right time and has been rushed to an important undercover assignment in Panama.
Pretending to be an English professor at the University of Panama, Nick is trying to infiltrate student groups who are determined to regain ownership of the Panama Canal. Nick, however, is still a young man (23) and falls in love with one of his students, which plays with his heart, mind, and ideologies – something a spy cannot afford.
One of the enigmatic pulls of spy novels is the moral ambiguity that comes with job. This is mostly true in books, as it is difficult, almost impossible actually, to capture the inner struggle in movies. The difference in the literary James Bond or Jason Bourne vs. their cinematic counterparts are striking when it comes to their inner struggles.
In Miraflores: Memories of a Young Spy by Keith Yocum the author captured the protagonist’s inner struggle in a complex and effective way. Young Nick Halliday joins the CIA part out of patriotism, and part out of a juvenile need to get back at his father, a high level official in the State Department.
The author throws many challenges at his young protagonist, including being assigned an important mission right off the bat, as well as young man’s hormones which cannot be underestimated. The moral ambiguity of the ownership of the Panama Canal, nor does the unethical act of dating one of his students never really bothers the young man as much as his loneliness on assignment.
One of the major plot points in this book is Nick’s relationship with his father. I don’t know if it was on purpose or not, but it’s quite clear that Nick is being the jerk while his father is doing his best to keep an ongoing relationship. I thought this point, as well as the whole book actually, was done very well in an engaging manner.
This is an easy to read, gripping book with lots of good history weaved into the narrative. I found the story to be even handed, presenting the case for the Americans investing, and controlling the Panama Canal, as well as the gripes the Panamanian people had with the project.
What a nice find Miraflores is. The novel about an idealistic young CIA agent on his first tour of duty rings true. Author Keith Yocum paces the tale nicely and populates it with interesting characters. Nick and Maria are the leads, and this could have been a tricky combination, but the author knew what he was doing. Events grew as did my interest, and I did feel a little sad to say good-bye to my favorite characters. We know that government work can be ugly, but Yocum manages to shine light into the darkness. Thanks, NetGalley, for the ARC.