Kristie Macrakis


Kristie Macrakis is an American historian of science, author and professor in the School of History, Technology and Society at the Georgia Institute of Technology. She is the author or editor of five books and is widely known for her work at the intersection of history of espionage and history of science and technology.

Biography

She received her Ph.D in the history of science at Harvard University. After teaching at Harvard University for a year as a Lecturer, Macrakis spent a year in Berlin on an Alexander von Humboldt Foundation Chancellor's Scholar for Future Leaders, before taking up a position at Michigan State University where she advanced from Assistant to Full Professor, before taking up a Full Professor position at Georgia Tech.
Prisoners, Lovers, and Spies and Seduced by Secrets are her most recent single authored books. Nigel Jones wrote in The Spectator that Prisoners, Lovers and Spies is "beguilingly informative and sweeping survey of hidden communication."Kirkus Reviews named it one of the best nonfiction books of 2014 and called it "lively...engaging" and "An engrossing study of unseen writing and the picaresque misadventures of those who employ it."
Seduced by Secrets was hailed as the "best book" on the Ministry for State Security by Benjamin Fischer in the International Journal of Intelligence and Counterintelligence While Joseph Goulden, of the Washington Times, gave it "a five cloak-and-dagger rating. Good reading for the specialist and the layman alike."
Macrakis is also the author of numerous articles, both scholarly and popular. While a graduate student at Harvard she found that the Rockefeller Foundation funded science in Nazi Germany; that work was covered in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung.. Her most widely read popular magazine article is"The Case of Agent Gorbachev," published in American Scientist.

Books authored