
The CIA Book Club
The Secret Mission to Win the Cold War with Forbidden Literature
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Narrated by:
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Michael David Axtell
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By:
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Charlie English
About this listen
“A story as fascinating as it is undersung . . . a riveting account” (The New York Times Book Review) of the CIA’s secret program to smuggle millions of books through the Iron Curtain during the Cold War
“English’s true tale of the federal government smuggling subversive books through the Iron Curtain sounds like a current-times call to action. . . . The book’s allure is intrigue, danger, and suspense in the service of meaning.”—NPR
For nearly five decades after the Second World War, the Iron Curtain divided Europe, forming the longest and most heavily guarded border on earth. No physical combat would take place along this frontier: the risk of nuclear annihilation was too high for that. Instead, the war was fought psychologically. It was a battle for hearts, minds, and intellects. Few understood this more clearly than George Minden, head of a covert intelligence operation known as the “CIA book program,” which aimed to undermine Soviet censorship and inspire revolt by offering different visions of thought and culture.
From its Manhattan headquarters, Minden’s “book club” secretly sent ten million banned titles into the East. Volumes were smuggled aboard trucks and yachts, dropped from balloons, hidden aboard trains, and stowed in travelers’ luggage. Nowhere were the books welcomed more warmly than in Poland, where they would circulate covertly among circles of like-minded readers, quietly making the case against Soviet communism. Such was the demand for Minden’s texts that dissidents began to reproduce them in the underground. By the late 1980s, illicit literature was so pervasive in Poland that censorship broke down: the Iron Curtain soon followed.
Charlie English narrates this tale of Cold War spycraft, smuggling, and secret printing operations for the first time, highlighting the work of a handful of extraordinary people who fought for intellectual freedom—people like Mirosław Chojecki, who suffered beatings, imprisonment, and exile in pursuit of his clandestine mission. The CIA Book Club is a story about the power of the printed word as a means of resistance and liberation. Books, it shows, can set you free.
©2025 Charlie English (P)2025 Random House AudioListeners also enjoyed...
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Critic reviews
“Entertaining and vivid . . . [Charlie] English writes thrillingly about the activists inside Poland. . . . This is a gripping account of an intriguing and little-known Cold War moment.”—The Observer
“Charlie English tells the tale of a 1980s secret operation in communist-controlled Poland. . . . A vivid and moving story. [English] is terrific at evoking the atmosphere of Poland in the 1970s and 1980s—not just the regime’s narrowed horizons and suffocating repression, but the excitement of the Solidarity trade union movement and the idealism of the young dissidents.”—The Times
“Vibrant, beautifully researched and exciting . . . a real pleasure to read—a finely written page-turner full of well-researched stories of smuggling, intrigue and survival.”—The Guardian
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Story
Across American history, the question of whose lives are long and healthy and whose lives are short and sick has always been shaped by the social and economic order. From the dispossession of Indigenous people and the horrors of slavery to infectious diseases spreading in overcrowded tenements and the vast environmental contamination caused by industrialization, and through climate change and pandemics in the twenty-first century, those in power have left others behind.
By: David Rosner, and others
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The Second Coming
- Sex and the Next Generation's Fight Over Its Future
- By: Carter Sherman
- Narrated by: Mia Hutchinson-Shaw
- Length: 12 hrs and 41 mins
- Unabridged
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Based on more than one hundred interviews with teenagers and young adults, activists, and experts, The Second Coming reveals how (mis)education, the internet, and politics have not only reshaped relationships but also unleashed a nationwide power struggle over the future of sex. From abortion clinics crowded with young patients, to “Dating with Dignity” seminars at the National Pro-Life Summit, to school board battles over what students should read, think, and feel, we meet folks from both sides of the aisle who are well-informed, empowered, and active (even if not always sexually).
By: Carter Sherman
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Something for Your Money
- A History of Las Vegas Casinos
- By: David G. Schwartz
- Narrated by: Eric Jason Martin
- Length: 11 hrs and 9 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
The modern American casino resort was born on a lonely stretch of road that, within a decade, would become known as the Las Vegas Strip. This was a place where America could cut loose, enjoying pleasures denied at home. As visitors flocked to Las Vegas, casinos became a business and then an industry. This book shares stories about how Las Vegas became—and stayed—America’s gambling capital, focusing on the casinos that made it famous and the hustlers, gangsters, number-crunchers, and dreamers who made them.
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Thomas More
- A Life
- By: Joanne Paul
- Narrated by: Ben Miles
- Length: 15 hrs and 20 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
homas More: A Life is a monumental biography of this hypnotic, flawed figure. Overturning prior interpretations of this titan of the sixteenth century, Joanne Paul shows Thomas More to have been intellectually and politically central to the making of modern Europe.
By: Joanne Paul
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History Lessons
- By: Zoe B. Wallbrook
- Narrated by: Jasmin Walker
- Length: 10 hrs and 27 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
As a newly minted junior professor, Daphne Ouverture spends her days giving lectures on French colonialism, writing her first academic book, and going on atrocious dates. Her small world suits her just fine. Until Sam Taylor dies. The rising star of Harrison University’s anthropology department was never one of Daphne’s favorites, despite his popularity. But that doesn’t prevent Sam’s killer from believing Daphne has something that belonged to Sam—something the killer will stop at nothing to get.
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Great mystery!
- By Sarah C on 07-07-25
By: Zoe B. Wallbrook
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Behind the Scenes: Covering the JFK Assassination
- By: Darwin Payne
- Narrated by: Todd Waites
- Length: 9 hrs and 39 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
On November 22, 1963, the author of Behind the Scenes was a young Dallas Times Herald reporter who sprinted from his newspaper desk to Dealey Plaza minutes after shots were fired at President John F. Kennedy. Eyewitnesses he found at Dealey Plaza included Abraham Zapruder, who insisted from the first moments that the president could not have survived the serious wounds he had seen so clearly through his camera viewfinder.
By: Darwin Payne
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The Big Hop
- The First Nonstop Flight Across the Atlantic Ocean and into the Future
- By: David Rooney
- Narrated by: Jeremy Clyde
- Length: 10 hrs and 14 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
In 1919, in Newfoundland, four teams of aviators came from Britain to compete in "the Big Hop": an audacious race to be the first to fly, nonstop, across the Atlantic Ocean. One pair of competitors was forced to abandon the journey halfway, and two pairs never made it into the air. Only one team, after a death-defying sixteen-hour flight, made it to Ireland.
By: David Rooney
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The Road That Made America
- Travels on America's First Frontier Highway
- By: James Dodson
- Narrated by: James Dodson
- Length: 15 hrs and 10 mins
- Unabridged
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Performance
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Story
In the bestselling tradition of Rinker Buck’s The Oregon Trail and Tony Horwitz’s Confederates in the Attic, The Road That Made America is a lively, epic account of one of the greatest untold stories in our nation’s history—the eight-hundred-mile long Great Wagon Road that 18th-century American settlers forged from Philadelphia to Georgia that expanded the country dramatically in the decades before we ventured west.
By: James Dodson
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I Want to Burn This Place Down
- Essays
- By: Maris Kreizman
- Narrated by: Maris Kreizman
- Length: 4 hrs and 39 mins
- Unabridged
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Performance
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Story
A debut essay collection by the inimitable cultural critic Maris Kreizman—an introspective, searing account of the life experiences that have pushed this former “good Democrat” even further to the political left.
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Her whineyness
- By D. F. Perschall on 07-07-25
By: Maris Kreizman
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Classified Woman
- The Sibel Edmonds Story
- By: Sibel D Edmonds
- Narrated by: Sibel D Edmonds
- Length: 14 hrs and 46 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
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Story
In this startling new memoir, Sibel Edmonds—the most classified woman in U.S. history—takes us on a surreal journey that begins with the secretive FBI and down the dark halls of a feckless Congress to a stonewalling judiciary and finally, to the national security whistleblowers movement she spearheaded. Having lived under Middle East dictatorships, Edmonds knows firsthand what can happen when government is allowed to operate in secret. Hers is a sobering perspective that combines painful experience with a rallying cry for the public’s right to know and to hold the lawbreakers accountable.
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Still relevant
- By Kevin Stever on 07-07-25
By: Sibel D Edmonds
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The Hiroshima Men
- The Quest to Build the Atomic Bomb, and the Fateful Decision to Use It
- By: Iain MacGregor
- Narrated by: Stephen McGann
- Length: 15 hrs and 22 mins
- Unabridged
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Performance
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Story
The Hiroshima Men’s vivid narrative recounts the decade-long journey toward this first atomic attack. It charts the race for the bomb during World War II, as the Allies fought the Axis powers, and is told through several key characters: General Leslie Groves, leader of the Manhattan Project alongside Robert Oppenheimer; pioneering Army Air Force pilot Colonel Paul Tibbets Jr.; the mayor of Hiroshima, Senkichi Awaya, who would die alongside eighty thousand fellow citizens; and Pulitzer Prize–winning writer John Hersey.
By: Iain MacGregor