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In True Face

A Woman's Life in the CIA, Unmasked

ebook
3 of 4 copies available
3 of 4 copies available
In this “extraordinarily brave and entertaining book” (Sonia Purnell, New York Times–bestselling author of A Woman of No Importance), the bestselling coauthor of Argo tells her riveting, courageous story of being a female spy at the height of the Cold War 
Jonna Hiestand Mendez began her CIA career as a “contract wife” performing secretarial duties for the CIA as a convenience to her husband, a young officer stationed in Europe. She needed his permission to open a bank account or shut off the gas to their apartment. Yet Mendez had a talent for espionage, too, and she soon took on bigger and more significant roles at the Agency. She parlayed her interest in photography into an operational role overseas, an unlikely area for a woman in the CIA. Often underestimated, occasionally undermined, she lived under cover and served tours of duty all over the globe, rising first to become an international spy and ultimately to Chief of Disguise at CIA’s Office of Technical Service.
In True Face recounts not only the drama of Mendez’s high-stakes work—how this savvy operator parlayed her “everywoman” appeal into incredible subterfuge—but also the grit and good fortune it took for her to navigate a misogynistic world. This is the story of an incredible spy career and what it took to achieve it.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 8, 2024
      Mendez (The Moscow Rules), the CIA’s former Chief of Disguise, details her fascinating career in this gripping memoir. Mendez began working for the agency in the 1960s, after traveling across Europe in her early 20s and falling for fellow American John Goeser, whom she met while working at a German bank. After she accepted his marriage proposal, Goeser revealed to Mendez that he was with the CIA. Her ambition and knack for espionage—including her skills in developing clandestine film quickly and accurately—helped her move beyond her initial assignment as a “contract wife” tasked with helping Goeser maintain his cover. Her true métier turned out to be designing disguises, and her skills landed her hazardous assignments in risky locations including Russia and East Germany, where she matched wits with the KGB and the Stasi. (The realistic face masks she designed so impressed then-CIA director William Webster that he had her wear one to a meeting with President George H.W. Bush before peeling it off to reveal her true face.) Mendez’s accounts of her high-pressure field work are enhanced by the more quotidian aspects of her service, including her struggles to take on as much responsibility, and make as much money, as her male counterparts. It adds up to an entertaining and enlightening glimpse inside the opaque world of spycraft. Agents: Grainne Fox and Christy Fletcher, UTA.

    • Kirkus

      February 15, 2024
      A veteran CIA agent tells...well, some. Mendez, co-author of Argo and The Moscow Rules, was recruited in the early 1960s, wooed by the "well-heeded martini drinkers" who roamed around Cold War Europe. She signed on after marrying a man who looked for the sort of adventures a CIA agent might expect--and then, it being the early '60s, found that her own adventures were largely administrative. Worse, when a woman working for the CIA was assigned to the U.S., she lost any seniority or promotions she had earned, distinctions "rendered null and void the moment you returned to or departed from DC." Male agents faced no such indignities, but Mendez agitated, and as a member of an agency-appointed "Petticoat Panel," she pressed for equal pay and other forms of equity that were actually adopted, well before other federal agencies made similar efforts. An eager learner, Mendez realized early on that the "soft skills" she and other women possessed, such as listening closely, "were an asset, not a liability." She racked up plenty of hard technical skills as well, eventually becoming adept at creating disguises and working with highly placed Hollywood artisans such as an Academy Award-winning makeup artist to make masks that "could conceal the presence of mixed ethnicities in apartheid South Africa...or obscure the presence of a western visage in North Korea." A climactic point in the text comes with the brilliant subterfuge that allowed a number of American diplomats to escape from Iran during the hostage crisis, disguised as members of a film crew--a "caper" that landed Mendez and her husband their own places in Hollywood, even if, in her case, as "a novelty--a female spy who'd risen in the ranks of the CIA." Fans of true espionage will enjoy Mendez's stories of a formative era in intelligence history.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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