The Man Who Was M: The Life of Maxwell Knight - Biography of Britain's Greatest Spymaster | Perfect for History Buffs & Espionage Enthusiasts
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"A fascinating study of a prominent M.I.5 officer and of how his private character affected his judgement -- not always for the good" -- Graham Greene When Maxwell Knight died in 1968, millions knew him as a well-loved British rado and television naturalist. Few, if any, were aware that this avuncular man with a brilliant rapport with animals had been one of the most important and mysterious figures in M.I.5. Maxwell Knight was a student of the occult, cricketer, jazz-musician and naturalist. He was also a spy-master -- and Ian Fleming's model for 'M", James Bond's shadowy boss. In the late 1930's he gathered round him an elite group of young case-officers in Department B5(b) -- M.I.5's most secret outpost. Known as Knight's Black Agents, these men and women made a crucial contribution to Britain's readiness for the Second World War. Knight's responsibility was counter-subversion. He planted agents in the Communist Party of Great Britain, the British Union of Fascists and other pre-war extremist groups. He exposed the Communist-inspired Woolwich Arsenal Spy Ring in 1938, interned Oswald Mosley, the British Fascist leader, in 1940 and in the same year uncovered a Nazi plot to prevent America's entry into the war. His private life was a disaster: his first wife committed suicide and the two subsequent marriages were strained. Anthony Masters has tracked down and interviewed Knight's surviving case-officers and agents, now scattered all over the world -- some still in hiding. Together they have been able to piece together the fascinating story of an extraordinary man.
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Maxwell Knight was MI-5's counter-subversion chief (Dept. B5(b)), serving from the mid-1920's to the late 1940's. His target enemies were both Soviet and German (including pro-Nazi British), and his tenure coincided with and/or was involved with significant cases such as Tyler Kent,Lord Haw-Haw, Blunt, Maclean, Philby, Mosley and Glading. [His warnings about the Philby nexus were not heeded.] Knight was also a prominent and popular naturist, which represented his later career.Knight, among his other accomplishments, recruited and trained several effective female undercover agents.[The reference to "M", James Bond's boss, derives from ian Fleming's acknowledgment that Max Knight was one of two real life inspirations for "M". ]The character of Knight in this treatment is one of sexual ambivalence and isolation, but nevertheless effective in counter-subversion administration and infiltration. Definitely not your average bear.I recommend this book primarily to those interested in subversive activities of the 20' through the 40's in Britain, most particularly those of the Right.
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