You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
A prolific writer, Sheila Kaye-Smith, in her "Mrs. Gailey," portrays an incredible picture of the struggles of a woman with a mentally impaired son in Sussex, England, after World War II. A must-read to get the idea of the life and position of women during that time.
None
They were doomed from the very beginning. During the Second World War, it didn’t take long for the British Secret Services to discover that Nazi Germany’s cohorts of espionage agents — influenced either by the illusionary light of profit or idealism, or the darkness of blackmail and reprisals — were largely comprised of amateurs so grossly inefficient it seemed almost a shame to hang them. Sourced exclusively from previously highly classified MI5 files, this thought-provoking new book tells the dramatic stories of some of Hitler’s so-called spies whose training and credentials as secret agents were so pathetic that it was virtually inevitable they be caught. Secret interrogation ce...
None