A few years before he died, James MacGibbon confessed to his closest family members that he had spied for the Soviet Union during World War II. At the end of the war MI5 suspected him of
espionage and interrogated him but he did not confess. Nevertheless they kept James, his wife Jean and their young family under close surveillance for a number of years, regularly intercepting
their mail and recording their telephone conversations. Only after James’s death did the true significance of what he might have revealed become clear-in his wartime office role, James had
access to the plans for Operation Overlord, D-Day. In this book, James’s son Hamish tells the story of his parents, their interaction with the communist party and their flirtation with wartime
espionage. It is a unique portrait of two very ordinary people caught up in the extraordinary events of World War Two and the Cold War.