As of last week, the only thing I knew about Agnes Smedley was that The Feminist Press had reissued her most famous book and that the poet Robert Lowell had objected that she – a known communist sympathizer – was allowed to stay at Yaddo – the artists’ colony in Saratoga Springs.
Getting to know her a little better has been one of the side benefits of Ben Macintyre’s pageturner Agent Sonya.
Agent Sonya – aka Ursula Kuczynski – was born into an intellectual and prosperous Jewish family in Berlin 1907. Radicalized by the political ferment of the Weimar Republic she became a communist, committed to the utopian ideal of a proletarian revolution.
Shanghai
In 1930, Ursula – now Mrs Hamburger – moved to Shanghai where her architect husband had been offered a job.
Shanghai between the wars was:
glamorous and seedy, shiny and grotty … home to a teeming international throng of beggars, millionaires, prostitutes, fortune-tellers, gamblers, journalists, gangsters, aristocrats, warlords, artists, pimps, bankers, smugglers and spies.
Part colony, part Chinese city, it was home to 50,000 foreigners surrounded by almost three million Chinese, most living in abject squalor. The international community included British, Americans, French, Germans, Portuguese, Indians, White Russians, Japanese and others, some of them penniless refugees, others new-minted plutocrats of staggering wealth.
It was a place where spying and intrigue were a way of life.
While the ex-pats lived lives of bourgeois luxury and glamor, a seething and bloody political battle raged between Chiang Kai-shek’s Nationalists and Mao Zedong’s Communists. In the city, the Nationalists had the upper hand and the slaughter was brutal. This was not a healthy time to be a communist in Shanghai.
Ursula settled into the domestic life of the ex-pat community. And then she met Agnes Smedley.
Over tea at the luxurious Cathay Hotel they forged a friendship that led to Ursula’s recruitment as a Soviet agent. Smedley had been recruited the previous year in Berlin.
Ursula was five months pregnant, and unaware of her new friend’s covert activities. She did not know that Agnes’s handbag contained a loaded pistol. She knew only that she had found a sister of the heart.
That friendship was destined to falter, but for the next two decades, Ursula/ Sonya was a very effective Soviet operative who led an astonishing set of double lives. Her dedication to the communist cause did not even waver even as many in her network of friends and contacts were murdered during the Stalinist purges.
Macintyre’s account of Sonya is gripping. If you’ve been drawn into the spy world of John le Carré, read this. It has all the narrative style of a good novel with the benefits of careful and detailed research.
Macintyre’s Sonya is an emotionally complex portrait of a highly successful espionage agent, a devoted mother, a dedicated communist idealist, and the kind of person who would be fun to have as a neighbor.
The Spy Who Came in From the Co-op
Some of the intriguing minor characters in book include Milicent Bagot – the lone MI5 expert who suspected Sonya. It is believed that John le Carré based his Soviet analyst Connie Sachs on Bagot. In Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, Smiley visits the retired Sachs in Oxford and pours Scotch into her teacup to get the memories to flow.
Another is the woman dubbed as “the spy who came in from the Co-op” because of her suburban housewife ordinariness. This is Melita Norwood who worked at the British Non-Ferrous Metals Research Association as a secretary and supplied nuclear secrets that were passed along to the Soviets. Her story was made into a novel by Jenny Rooney that then became the 2018 film Red Joan with Judi Dench in the lead.
But all that aside – it is the character and personality of Ursula/ Sonya that Macintyre truly brings into focus.
Her intelligence career was extraordinary and in addition to Shanghai, she operated in Manchuria (smuggling radio parts in her child’s teddy bear), Poland, Danzig, and Switzerland. In Switzerland, she married Len Buerton which meant she could obtain a British passport. As Switzerland became encircled and the Nazis swept across Europe, Ursula left for England where her parents and siblings were refugees. Again, she set up shop to serve the cause.
After her brother recruited the atom scientist Klaus Fuchs she became the conduit, first meeting him in a cafe across from the Snow Hill station in Birmingham. By then she was living in Oxfordshire – giving birth to her third child, sending the other two off to school, making friends with the neighbors, baking scones, and funneling secrets to the Soviets.
After Klaus Fuchs was arrested in 1950, Ursula knew that MI5 was closing in and that it was just a matter of time. She left for East Germany with her two youngest children, her oldest was at university in Aberdeen. In the decades that followed she received many accolades from the Soviets and became a successful novelist – re-working some of the episodes of her life into bestsellers under the pen name Ruth Werner. She died in 2000.
Agnes Smedley returned to America in 1941 and was an advocate for China and the revolution.
She was accused of being a communist spy and she was followed by the FBI. Feeling the pressure, she left to live in England where she died after surgery for an ulcer in 1950.
Her ashes were buried a year later at the Babaoshan Revolutionary Cemetery in Beijing.
I’ve started reading Daughter of Earth. It’s pretty grim stuff. Don’t know how far I will get. What amazing lives!
Dear Josie,
the journalist Harry Chapman Pincher once told me that he ghost wrote Eddie Chapmans autobiography ‘The real Eddie Chapman story’. He also told me where to look for the grave of Guy Burgess at West Meon in Hampshire. Chapman Pincher had been a Scientist during the war. Our conversation became a catalyst for those present to relate personal stories connected to the Doublecross system. One of those present was the daughter of “Gelatine” and so a goddaughter of Dusko Popov. Another was the Author, Madelaine Masson (read her book ‘I never kissed Paris goodbye’). I had known Madelaine for sometime. She had helped, (begrudging) Otto Strasser to escape advancing German armies on Paris in 1940. She was also one of the first members of the resistance to enter Oradour-sur-Glane after the massacre. The smell of burning flesh was all pervasive, she told me. One of my own was one of the case officers assign to “Garbo”.
OK. This is fascinating stuff. I’m going to have to investigate further. And thanks for all the info.
Another true patriot RAW agent was Ravindra Kaushik aka Black Tiger. Read my blog Prabhakarwrites.wordpress.com/blog to get to know more…and share your thoughts…
OK. This is fascinating stuff. I’m going to have to investigate further. And thanks for all the info. However it now looks like this blog is no longer available.
You’ve made this sound very tempting, Josie. I’m not only drawn to the Macintyre book, but also the Smedley novel.
The Smedley was a bestselling hit when it came out in 1929 and then – just like Smedley – disappeared until the recent republication. The big chill of the Cold War made such lives and works unfashionable. Here’s the blurb from the 1973 edition:
“Branded as a “radical,” a “Premature fascist,” and a “red sympathizer” who saw her books burned during the height of the McCarthy period of the 1950s, Agnes Smedley was largely excised from American literature until the 1973 reissue of Daughter of Earth. With fierce and painful honesty, this autobiographical novel describes her recurrent attempts to survive the scars of the poverty, child abuse, ignorance, and pain that she felt growing up in Midwestern and Western mining towns during the early part of this century, and portrays her involvement as an adult with revolutionary movements in India and China. This rare example of the self-transformation of an ordinary working-class woman into a feminist, teacher, writer, tireless activist for social change and revolutionary is powerful and compelling.”
Absolutely fascinating. Such a fierce commitment to her political principles, although using her children as cover is perhaps a step too far.
Macintyre dwells on that aspect in some detail. In his account, she was devoted to her children, and devoted to her cause. This complexity is one of the reasons the book is so satisfying. She was also addicted to the adrenaline rush of danger and the risks she took would not be those we mere mortals could endure.
Thanks Josie for this fascinating read about people I’d never heard of before!
Thanks Ashley. Fortunately, there seems to be an endless supply of fascinating people to know about and great writers to bring them to life.
I’ve read a couple of MacIntyre’s, but not this one. They really are quite astonishing stories and amazing reads. I have another on my ‘to be read shelf’ and of course, lots of Carre’s. I see them as treats I have to space out. Connie Sachs is a great character. I’m pleased she may be inspired by a real woman.
I’ve read “Agent ZigZag” and “Operation Mincemeat” which means I have more good reading ahead. He really does bring these stories into living technicolor. And for creating a whole espionage universe Le Carre can’t be beat. And, from what I’ve read, Milicent Bagot was a person to reckon with. Outspoken, with an encyclopedic knowledge of the Soviet spy world, she did not suffer fools and she was surrounded by many.
Zig-zag and Mincemeat are the ones I have read! I have Double Cross on the bookshelf. I found Zig-Zag particularly interesting as when Chapman was dropped into Britain, it is possible he may have walked past both my grandads!
Please – say more….
Well, one grandfather will have been working in the fields on Zigzag’s route out of Norfolk and the other worked at de Havillands where Zig Zag was heading. Very, very loose links, but they bonded me to the story’s place and time more.