I had high hopes for this book but it did not deliver. The first couple chapters were good and the chapter about the spy was interesting but this is not a good example of academic writing, which is what I was expecting from a college history professor. If you are looking for a comprehensive book on the role Oklahoma played during the Cold War this is not it. There are several chapters where the author describes his personal experiences of researching and learning about the topic but I don't think it was necessary to recount that in historical writing. For example, he spent an entire chapter talking about the people he met and thanked them for their help. That type of information should be in the acknowledgements not in the middle of the book. I also did not like the use of "I" throughout the book. It was frustrating to read and is not a professional way to write. While he used "I" a lot, I did not learn about his interpretation of historical material, which ultimately makes up historical books. It was more of regurgitating information he had learned into a narrative format. As a historian I would not suggest this book to anyone seriously interested in the topic but a casual reader may enjoy it more than I did.