Writing a book about intelligence work…
Writing a book about intelligence work for a general audience while maintaining appropriate discretion about classified material and protecting the identities of individuals who cannot be named publicly is a constraint that most publishers have neither the experience nor the patience to navigate properly. I was therefore cautious when approaching this engagement and remained cautious throughout the early stages of our conversations. That caution proved unnecessary.
The legal team demonstrated a sophisticated understanding of the specific constraints applicable to former intelligence professionals and their guidance was practical, precise and never oriented toward restriction for its own sake. The editorial team worked within those constraints without allowing them to diminish the substantive value of what the book had to say. The balance between what could be said and how to say it most effectively within those limits was achieved through a genuinely collaborative process that I found both professionally satisfying and intellectually stimulating.
The finished work communicates what it needs to communicate to a general readership without compromising anything it should not compromise. That outcome required skill on both the legal and editorial sides simultaneously and this team demonstrated it throughout. The book has been well received in national security policy circles and among general readers interested in how intelligence work actually functions. That dual reception was the goal and it was achieved.








