Abstract

Most readers of Bombshell will profit by scanning its final two pages before the rest of the book. They contain the signed partial "confession" of Theodore Alvin Hall, an atomic spy as important as, if less notorious than, Klaus Fuchs. These pages reveal not merely a young idealist who felt that his cause was just, but also an adult who never wavered in his belief, even after Khrushchev’s denunciation of Stalin, that the United States was the more dangerous and aggressive of the superpowers. He stood by his ideology throughout his life, which included a brilliant scientific career at England’s Cambridge University, near which he presently resides in retirement.

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