A Cold War Legacy Based On Actual Family Events
In the shadow of the Cold War, some secrets refuse to stay buried. When a son begins to unravel the truth about his parents’ clandestine work for Canadian intelligence, he discovers a legacy far more complex than he ever imagined. Set against the backdrop of 1960s Vancouver, this gripping memoir reveals how an ordinary family became entangled in the covert world of espionage-infiltrating organizations, running surveillance, and living double lives in service of their country.Drawing on five decades of investigative journalism experience, the author pieces together fragments of his family’s hidden past: dead drops in city parks, coded communications, and the psychological toll of living a lie. His mother Elizabeth, haunted by her residential school trauma, and his father, a physician whose medical practice served as perfect cover, navigated a dangerous world where loyalty was currency and trust could be fatal.
But this is more than a spy story. It’s an intimate exploration of how intelligence work devours families from within, how secrets poison relationships across generations, and how the children of operatives inherit wounds they never asked for. Echoes of Shadows asks an uncomfortable question: when does patriotic duty become a form of betrayal?
A haunting meditation on family, loyalty, and the price of keeping secrets-where the Cold War’s longest shadows fall not on nations, but on the lives of those who served in silence.