
Amaryllis Fox served in the Central Intelligence Agency for eight years when she was in her 20s, and that experience is the impetus for her memoir, Life Undercover: Coming of Age in the CIA. But its contents are both broader and deeper, beginning with uncertainties encountered in childhood: when a grade school friend is killed by a terrorist's bomb, Fox's father offers her an education in current events, to understand what took her friend away. An insightful, curious child, the young Fox makes early observations about her parents' hidden or inner lives.
These trends persist from high school to college: before starting at Oxford, Fox poses as an acquaintance's wife, slipping into Burma to record and sneak out a historic interview with an imprisoned democratic leader. Early in her Georgetown master's program in conflict and terrorism, this high-achieving, daring young woman with international interests attracts the interest of the CIA (not the first intelligence agency to approach her, but the first to appeal). Fox continues to impress in her training within the agency, often winning coveted, extra-dangerous spots ahead of standard career trajectories. She recounts the challenges, from her analyst work through her field work in 16 countries, with absorbing anecdotes.
Although she's always had an interest in people, motivations and relationships--it's what makes her so good, a "velvet hammer," as one senior case officer calls her--Fox shows an increasing concern for the acts she puts on, the roles she must play. A CIA agent pretending to be an arms dealer pretending to be an art dealer, she wonders "which part of me is she and which part of me is me. Would I be able to make the same impact if I lived life in my true skin?" It is in part this worry about identity that finally leads her out of the agency--that, and the birth of her daughter, in her second marriage since entering her dangerous line of work.
One expects a CIA memoir to be thrilling; this one is positively riveting. But in addition, Fox's writing is surprisingly lovely, lines often ringing like poetry. "It's a strange place to find a man who aspires to deal in death, what with the music drifting from the park as the day goes to gloaming and the laughter issuing from pretty, wine-stained mouths along the riverbank." "My waking self passes me one more note that night.... One of those memories so deeply packed away that I have to unfold its sepia edges gently, in case they turn to dust in my hands."
Life Undercover is an astonishing book. Readers interested in the high adventure of tradecraft will certainly be satisfied, but Fox offers as well nuanced and sensitive perspectives on international politics, and humanizing views of nuclear arms dealers and terrorists. Her subtle, lyric prose elevates this memoir beyond its action-packed subject matter, highlighting instead its true focus: the breadth and beauty of humanity. --Julia Kastner, librarian and blogger at pagesofjulia
Shelf Talker: This memoir of a talented young woman's CIA career is that rare combination: enthralling and gorgeously written.