cover image Lincoln’s Spies: Their Secret War to Save a Nation

Lincoln’s Spies: Their Secret War to Save a Nation

Douglas Waller. Simon & Schuster, $35 (624p) ISBN 978-1-5011-2684-0

Espionage in the Civil War gets a thorough, sometimes fascinating examination in this hefty volume from Waller (Wild Bill Donovan). Detective Allan Pinkerton, Richmond society dame Elizabeth Van Lew, military intelligence pioneer George Sharpe, and rogue lawman Lafayette Baker produced mixed results in four years of operations for the Union, and their exploits are presented in impressive detail. Van Lew, a Union sympathizer, remained in Richmond when war broke out and ran a highly effective network of agents who reported on troop movements, political tensions, and the Confederates’ ability to fight. Sharpe, a prosperous New Yorker, started out as a captain in the New York State Militia and then inadvertently became the Union’s finest military spymaster with reports that presaged today’s sophisticated intelligence analysis. He was much more successful than Pinkerton, whose information collection was vast but rarely timely enough to help. Baker’s Brigands—which Waller describes as a network of informers, “plug ugly” detectives, and other opportunists—were free with the law and not above lining their own pockets, but did identify corruption that hampered the Union fight. Waller’s narrative moves chronologically, alternating between each of the four subjects and recounting their exploits in detail. This is a long but cracking good tale. Agent: Kris Dahl, ICM. (Aug.)