
Forget James Bond. George Minden was the real thing. A Romanian aristocrat by birth, he could have spent his days in manor houses, sipping brandy and debating politics. Instead, he entered the world of espionage. A CIA operative, with a mind like a dagger, he moved without drawing attention, deliberate and invisible. In 1983, while the world braced for nuclear war, Minden was planning something truly subversive. He would flood communist Poland with forbidden literature. Not leaflets. Not propaganda. Real stories. The kind that rattled regimes. The kind that made people think.
