Episode Description
What happens when a secret police force writes its own novels?
In this episode of Spymasters, Antonia Senior is joined by academic and KGB expert Filip Kovacevic to explore the hidden world of Soviet spy fiction—and the extraordinary role it played inside the KGB itself. Drawing on his book KGB Literati, Kovacevic reveals how intelligence officers, counter-spies, and veterans of state security became novelists, producing stories designed to shape public opinion, recruit future officers, and redefine the image of the KGB within Soviet society.
From the early post-war novels of Roman Kim to the officially sanctioned Chekist Stories series produced by the KGB Press Bureau, the conversation uncovers how fiction became a tool of counterintelligence, psychological influence, and regime legitimacy. We also examine why Western intelligence analysts paid close attention to these books, how they influenced a young Vladimir Putin, and why the tradition continues today under the FSB and SVR.
A deep dive into propaganda, imagination, and power—and a reminder that in espionage, stories can be as important as secrets.
Find the book: https://amzn.eu/d/fRVZgoI
Find Filip on X: @chekistmonitor
on the web: thechekistmonitor.blogspot.com
on substack: https://kgbstack.substack.com/
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