In True Face: A Woman's Life in the CIA, Unmasked
4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars | 241 ratings
Price: 17.05
Last update: 08-23-2024
About this item
The bestselling coauthor of The Moscow Rules and Argo tells her riveting, courageous story of being a female spy at the height of the Cold War
Jonna Hiestand Mendez began her CIA career as a “contract wife” performing secretarial duties for the CIA as a convenience to her husband, a young officer stationed in Europe. She needed his permission to open a bank account or shut off the gas to their apartment. Yet Mendez had a talent for espionage, too, and she soon took on bigger and more significant roles at the Agency. She parlayed her interest in photography into an operational role overseas, an unlikely area for a woman in the CIA. Often underestimated, occasionally undermined, she lived under cover and served tours of duty all over the globe, rising first to become an international spy and ultimately to Chief of Disguise at CIA’s Office of Technical Service.
In True Face recounts not only the drama of Mendez’s high-stakes work—how this savvy operator parlayed her “everywoman” appeal into incredible subterfuge—but also the grit and good fortune it took for her to navigate a misogynistic world. This is the story of an incredible spy career and what it took to achieve it.
Top reviews from the United States
A few quibbles about repetitions. First, how she escaped the shadow of her older sister, yet her repetitions of these comments in odd places demonstrate that she never did manage to overcome comparisons to her sister. Second, is how often she reveals her struggle against the misogyny of the CIA only to drop the subject with banal comments that she was too busy with engaging work or too entrenched in the exotic surroundings to give much thought to the patterns of sexism. The other is the constant egotistic and self-congratulatory comments about how she excelled in everything because she applied herself to the task. Nonetheless, it is an easy read and succeeds when the author fully develops interesting part of the clandestine missions and the culture of the spy agency and diplomacy.
Jonna and her first husband, John Goeser, dedicated their whole lives to the CIA to serve their country. He was a CIA Security Officer; she worked in the CIA’s Office of Technical Services. Her work often involved “matching wits with Russia’s KGB, East Germany’s Stasi, Cuba’s DGI and China’s MSS” where she became involved in many dangerous situations. The first part of the book detailed a dizzying number of operations she was involved in without naming exact cities or locations (probably for security reasons). It also goes into great detail about her photography work and/or developing films as a photo operations officer.
Not only did she have to stay focused on her high-stakes work, she also had many professional challenges, her greatest being Tom Smallwood, her Chief in the subcontinent, who worked hard to destroy her career but was ultimately unsuccessful in sabotaging her reputation and her performance.
There is a lot of detail in the book about hostile interrogation and defensive driving training (executing a reverse 180 maneuver while looking down the barrel of a gun) at the Farm, the CIA’s training center, south of Washington, DC.
On a humorous aside, she talks about the time she was on a trip once to Kolkata, when she told a woman who was pushing into her personal space to “Stop pushing!” Little did she know, that woman was Mother Teresa.
After her 23 years of marriage to John, they decided to part ways. When they did, she called her friend Tony Mendez, an artist and Chief of the Clandestine Imaging Division in OTS. He immediately dropped everything to go meet her. Their relationship bloomed and he ended up proposing to her. They were married in 1991. Tony received the CIA’s Trailblazer Award and the movie Argo depicted Tony’s rescue of six diplomats in Tehran. They both retired early; he, at age 50, she, after she had her first child at age 47. He took up painting again. She became a mother, teacher, photographer, public speaker, author and event planner/Vice President for a music foundation. They were founding members of the International Spy Museum in Washington, DC.
At the end of the book, she gives tribute to another trailblazer—Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the Supreme Court Justice who, “on many levels, represented women in America and their struggle for equal treatment in the workplace.”
All in all, I found this a fascinating read.