Nadine Akkerman is professor of early modern literature and culture at Leiden University and author of the acclaimed Invisible Agents. Pete Langman is an academic, OED bibliographer, author of Killing Beauties, and manuscript editor for Early Modern Low Countries Journal.
“Le Carré fans will find Spycraft anything but stodgy and over-long. It opens with a superbly vivid account.”—Jonathan Bate, The Telegraph “A classic and incisive monograph, based on all the right primary sources, that also manages to be absorbing, illuminating and entertaining. The lavish illustrations are an integral part of clarifying a fiendishly complex story.”—Diarmaid MacCulloch, Times Literary Supplement “Enlightening. . . . Many of the spies who are [Spycraft’s] heroes took their secrets and techniques to the grave.”—Alexander Glover, Irish Daily Mail Included in The Economist’s Books of the Year, 2024 “Most enjoyable of all is the epilogue of instructions for invisible inks, codes and poisons, responsibility for the use of which ‘resides with the reader and the reader alone.’”—Pippa Bailey, New Statesman “A diverting history and how-to manual.”—Harper’s Magazine “[Spycraft] canters through forgeries, codes, disguises, invisible inks and poisons. . . . There is joy on every page.”—Iona McLaren, Spectator “Spycraft is an excellent book, accessibly written, profoundly researched, cleverly illustrated and immensely readable. It has in it the ingredients of a wonderful documentary series.”—Pete Davidson, Literary Review Chosen by Joseph Hone as a History Today Book of the Year, 2024 “A rich and roving evaluation of the underhand operations that were frequently conducted in the Early Modern world. A brilliantly researched survey.”—Unseen Histories “Spycraft is not only a textual tour de force, but contains a wealth of explanatory images of the authors’ recreations of locked letters and forged signature stamps.”—Jackie Eales, History Today “This original and compelling book delves deep into early modern spycraft as it was actually practised. Techniques of letterlocking, the making and breaking of seals, encryption and invisible ink are all revealed in forensic detail. This is richly textured history, written with verve and a real appreciation for the source material.”—John Cooper, author of The Queen’s Agent “Akkerman and Langman present a highly readable account of the really practical aspects of spycraft in an accessible and captivating way. An engaging and endlessly fascinating volume.”—James Daybell, author of Women Letter-Writers in Tudor England “A fascinating deep dive into early modern espionage techniques, a world of forgery, cipher wheels, secret letters written with invisible inks, and poison drawn from vipers and toads. Akkerman and Langman have produced nothing less than the origin story of James Bond’s Q-Branch.”—Charles Cumming, bestselling author of the BOX 88 series