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The Espionage Atlas: Havana
Through A Spy's Eyes
Author: P.J. Agness
Series: The Espionage Atlas
Narrator: P.J. Agness
Unabridged: 1 hr 18 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: Directorate Press
Published: 06/09/2026
Synopsis
Havana is a city built for watchers.
Behind the sea wall, old hotels, embassy gates, music, heat, and polished lobbies lies another map. Not the tourist map. The spy map.
The Espionage Atlas: Havana looks at the Cuban capital through the hidden geography of intelligence history. This is not spy fantasy and not a travel guide. It is true espionage told through place: the city people photograph, and the city power uses after the camera lowers.
From the rupture between Washington and Havana to the Bay of Pigs, Operation Mongoose, embassy pressure, surveillance culture, informant networks, and the betrayals of Ana Montes and Manuel Rocha, this volume shows how Havana became more than scenery. It became an intelligence environment.
A hotel becomes a registry of habits. An embassy becomes a beacon. A waterfront becomes exposure. A room becomes a question. A person with access becomes a route.
Written in a calm, cinematic nonfiction style, The Espionage Atlas: Havana teaches the listener how to read a city the way intelligence services read it: through access, pattern, pressure, visibility, and consequence.
Not spy fantasy. Not a tourist guide.
A city seen through a spy’s eyes.
Behind the sea wall, old hotels, embassy gates, music, heat, and polished lobbies lies another map. Not the tourist map. The spy map.
The Espionage Atlas: Havana looks at the Cuban capital through the hidden geography of intelligence history. This is not spy fantasy and not a travel guide. It is true espionage told through place: the city people photograph, and the city power uses after the camera lowers.
From the rupture between Washington and Havana to the Bay of Pigs, Operation Mongoose, embassy pressure, surveillance culture, informant networks, and the betrayals of Ana Montes and Manuel Rocha, this volume shows how Havana became more than scenery. It became an intelligence environment.
A hotel becomes a registry of habits. An embassy becomes a beacon. A waterfront becomes exposure. A room becomes a question. A person with access becomes a route.
Written in a calm, cinematic nonfiction style, The Espionage Atlas: Havana teaches the listener how to read a city the way intelligence services read it: through access, pattern, pressure, visibility, and consequence.
Not spy fantasy. Not a tourist guide.
A city seen through a spy’s eyes.