Lies and Spies

A Story of Espionage and Identity in World War II

Name: Fred Brown, AKA Don Richardson

Current Picture:

Don Richardson

I was as glad as anyone to see the war end. Convincing the Army to let me reutrn to the US was a challenge because one of their doctors diagnosed me with Schizophrenia. General Sibert, my commander in the OSS, tore up the report. I've enjoyed life on the homefront with an Irish wife, baby, and Fergus, my best friend who saved me from Nazi execution with a song.

I knew my peace was to be short lived. There were too many questions left unanswered at the end of the war. Also, every month the OSS sent me a paycheck and they assigned me Russian language tutor. It wasn't too difficult to guess my next assignment.

It came on a Sunday, right in the middle of Pastor O.C. Baltzer's long-winded prayer. My little boy, Gunny, shouted "Soldiers!" when three Generals crashed through the church double doors. I figured Meg, my wife, would be furious, but she took it in stride. Most German Lutherans in Fredericksburg, Texas, watched me rush the aisle to them.

The trio whisked my away from the farm right after a fried chicken dinner. I had a lot to do on mission #2. Like usual, I was pretty well on my own, but I could see my crash-course in Russian. What chilled me most was learning that someone high in the spy organizations of The US or Great Britain was a double agent. Of course, I was to sniff him out. But, he already had me pegged, and  alerted a Soviet kill team of my arrival in Europe. Once again, my chances of survival were near zero, especially since the traitor had revealed my previous identity of Zelly Zellner, a personal spy for Himmler.

What would you sacrifice to stop history’s most evil regime?

Your morals?

Your soul?

Your Indentity?

When the world plunges into war, the U.S. is woefully unprepared. In 1940, they recruit Fred Brown, a 17-year-old Texas Eagle Scout, to go to Nazi Germany as a deep-cover mole under the alias of Frederich "Zelly" Zellner.

He's inserted deep inside Hitler’s Reich with one mission - "fit in ... or die" and one goal - help any way he can.  When he arrives in January of 1941, he finds the Nazi regime is a world of paranoia, brutality, and ever-watchful eyes. Zelly must flawlessly play the role of a devoted Hitler Youth and SS officer while keeping his truths secret. On the day he reaches Berlin, he finds his picture on the cover of a 1938 Nazi magazine. It challenges everything he knows about his mission and himself. He realizes he’snot just a spy in enemy territory… he’s a pawn in a much larger game.

Hunted by the Gestapo and manipulated by powerful figures on both sides, Zelly must walk a razor’s edge where one mistake means execution. But how can he avoid errors when he doesn't know the rules of the contest?

Survival depends on mastering the darkest “subterfuge” of all — he must become the monster he’s pretending to be without losing the boy he once was.

Awards and Recognition for The Eagle Scout Picture

Readers Favorite Gold Award

Gold Medal Winner of the 2025 Readers’ Favorite International Book Award Contest in the Fiction – Thriller – Espionage category.

Bronze Medal from BookFest

Bronze Medal Winner in The Bookfest Spring 2025 contest in Mystery – Spies & Espionage category.

BookFEst Silver Award

Silver Medal Winner in The Bookfest Spring 2025 contest in Espionage – Thriller category.

Reviews of The Eagle Scout Picture

Review from Reader's Favorite in winning the 2025 International Book Award Contest.

5 Stars - Congratulations.

The Eagle Scout Picture by Gary Kidney is a razor-sharp espionage thriller that plunges readers into the perilous heart of Nazi Germany through the eyes of Frederich 'Zelly' Zellner. A young American forced to adopt the identity of a Hitler Youth, Zelly becomes a lone operative on the knife's edge of survival, betrayal, and discovery. Trained in deception but led by conscience, he carries out daring missions behind enemy lines, risking everything to undermine the Nazi regime. Each choice he makes challenges his morality, resolve, and identity. Based on real wartime intelligence operations, the novel masterfully blends historical fact with the relentless pacing of a thriller, keeping the tension high and the emotional stakes even higher.

Author Gary Kidney has a keen sense of pacing and the art of the reveal to let information slip at just the right moments in this historical espionage adventure, ensuring that every moment is packed with authenticity and suspense. The work is a great balance of plot and character-led action. Zelly is a compelling protagonist whose internal conflicts elevate the novel beyond typical spy fare in an emotive story we're so personally invested in that you can't possibly leave without finding out what fate has in store for him. The same descriptive treatment is given to every scene with sharp attention to detail. This makes the action sequences suitably thrilling, but without sacrificing emotional depth or historical accuracy, as these elements are naturally woven into the story. Overall, The Eagle Scout Picture is a highly recommended standout addition to WWII literature that honors the complexity and bravery of wartime intelligence work while being thoroughly entertaining.


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Sample the story from The Eagle Scout Picture

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