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The Göring Gamble
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 704

The Göring Gamble

The Göring Gamble A Mattie McGary + Winston Churchill 1930s Adventure In late 1934, the adventure-seeking Hearst photojournalist Mattie McGary closes in on exposing an international scandal that promises to be one of the biggest stories in her career. Through her godfather Winston Churchill and Rabbi Abba Hillel Silver, head of the largest Reform Jewish congregation in the United States, Mattie receives copies of documents showing that in early 1933, Nazi Air Minister Hermann Göring, began to create an illegal thousand-bomber air force forbidden to Germany under the terms of the Treaty of Versailles. Shockingly, since Germany will not have the capacity to mass-produce advanced high-speed a...

Becoming Winston Churchill: The Untold Story of Young Winston and His American Mentor
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 473

Becoming Winston Churchill: The Untold Story of Young Winston and His American Mentor

Winston Churchill was only 20 when he met the man whom he credited, more than any other, with shaping him as a statesman and an orator. As Churchill wrote: “I regard his as the biggest and most original mind I have ever met. When I was a young man, he instantly gained my confidence and I feel that I owe the best things in my life to him.” That man was Bourke Cockran, a charismatic Irish-born Democratic Congressman from New York City, acclaimed by his peers as the greatest orator in the Gilded Age of politics. Following the death of Winston’s father, Lord Randolph in 1895, Cockran who as a widower, became the lover of Churchill’s mother, the beautiful American-born heiress Jennie Jerome, who persuaded Cockran to take her son under his wing. Churchill, Cockran, Randolph, Politics, British, Prime Minister, New York, Democratic Congressman, Young Life, Mentor, American

The Liebold Protocol, a Mattie McGary + Winston Churchill 1930’s Adventure
  • Language: en

The Liebold Protocol, a Mattie McGary + Winston Churchill 1930’s Adventure

In her latest adventure, The Liebold Protocol, Winston Churchill’s Scottish goddaughter, Mattie McGary, the adventure-seeking Hearst photojournalist, reluctantly returns to Nazi Germany in the summer of 1934 and once again finds herself in deadly peril in a gangster state where widespread kidnappings and ransoms by the SA and SS are sanctioned by the new Nazi government. It didn’t begin that way. At Churchill’s suggestion, Mattie initially investigates one of the best-kept secrets of the Great War—that in 1915, facilitated by a sinister German-American agent working for Henry Ford, British Empire and Imperial German officials essentially committed treason by agreeing Britain would se...

Appointment in Prague
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 158

Appointment in Prague

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The Prussian Memorandum, A Mattie McGary + Winston Churchill 1930s Adventure
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 455

The Prussian Memorandum, A Mattie McGary + Winston Churchill 1930s Adventure

With the Third Reich and the US government out to stop her, intrepid journalist Mattie McGary races to expose the shameful secret that American agents helped Nazis use racist US state laws as a model to oppress and persecute German Jews.

Pandemic Re-Awakenings
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 420

Pandemic Re-Awakenings

Pandemic Re-Awakenings offers a multi-level and multi-faceted exploration of a century of remembering, forgetting, and rediscovering the influenza pandemic of 1918-1919, arguably the greatest catastrophe in human history. Twenty-three researchers present original perspectives by critically investigating the hitherto unexplored vicissitudes of memory in the interrelated spheres of personal, communal, medical, and cultural histories in different national and transnational settings across the globe. The volume reveals how, even though the Great Flu was overshadowed by the commemorative culture of the Great War, recollections of the pandemic persisted over time to re-emerge towards the centenary of the 'Spanish' Flu and burst into public consciousness following the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic. The chapters chart historiographical neglect (while acknowledging the often-unnoticed dialogues between scientific and historical discourses), probe silences, and trace vestiges of social and cultural memories that long remained outside of what was considered collective memory.

Appointment in Prague: A Mattie McGary + Winston Churchill World War 2 Adventure
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 158

Appointment in Prague: A Mattie McGary + Winston Churchill World War 2 Adventure

In the novella, Appointment in Prague, one woman, a British secret agent, sets out in May 1942 to single-handedly send to hell the most evil Nazi alive--SS General Reinhard Heydrich, the head of the SD, the domestic and foreign counter-intelligence wing of the SS; second in rank only to the head of the SS himself, Reichsfuhrer SS Heinrich Himmler; and the architect of "The Final Solution" that will send millions of European Jews to their doom. When British Prime Minister Winston Churchill authorizes the SOE--the 'Special Operations Executive'-- in October 1941 to assassinate Heydrich, he is unaware that the entire operation has been conceived and is being run by his Scottish goddaughter, the...

The Caudill Family
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 940

The Caudill Family

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 1993
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  • Publisher: Unknown

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Northern Ireland Yearbook 2003
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 568

Northern Ireland Yearbook 2003

This yearbook is a comprehensive reference guide to all aspects of life in this region. It covers local aspects of politics, business studies, economics, European studies and media studies.

Stacking the coffins
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 308

Stacking the coffins

The 1918–19 influenza epidemic killed more than 50 million people, and infected between one fifth and half of the world's population. It is the world's greatest killing influenza pandemic, and is used as a worst case scenario for emerging infectious disease epidemics like the corona virus COVID-19. It decimated families, silenced cities and towns as it passed through, stilled commerce, closed schools and public buildings and put normal life on hold. Sometimes it killed several members of the same family. Like COVID-19 there was no preventative vaccine for the virus, and many died from secondary bacterial pneumonia in this pre-antibiotic era. In this work, Ida Milne tells how it impacted on Ireland, during a time of war and revolution. But the stories she tells of the harrowing impact on families, and of medicine's desperate search to heal the ill, could apply to any other place in the world at the time.