"A lively read . . . not only a good cloak and dagger tale, but [Treacherous Passage] also throws further light on the still-not fully documented German efforts to carry on covert operations against the United States during the Great War."—A. A. Nofi, Strategy Page
"An excellent book casting light on one segment of the troubled relationship the United States has often had with Mexico."—Charles H. Bogart, Journal of America's Military Past
"Mills presents the readers with a lively and compelling story about lesser known events on Mexico's southwestern Pacific coast. In so doing Mills alerts his audience to the significance of these events in the larger context of German and US intelligence operations in Mexico."—Thomas M. Leonard, Latin American Research Review
“Barbara Tuchman meets John Le Carré in Treacherous Passage, a gripping story of espionage and intrigue that reminds us that World War I truly was a global war fought on many fronts.”—Christopher Capozzola, author of Uncle Sam Wants You: World War I and the Making of the Modern American Citizen
“The Zimmermann Telegram is infamous. But the story of Germany’s World War I plot to launch sea raiders against U.S. commercial shipping from Mazatlán remains an episode almost as obscure today as it was in 1918. This book is a revelation.”—Alan Axelrod, author of Miracle at Belleau Wood and The Battle of Verdun