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Books > Biography > Historical, political & military
Mention female spies, and most people think of Mata Hari. But
during the Roaring Twenties, Marguerite Harrison and Stan Harding
were the cause celebre: two beautiful, accomplished women whose
names were splashed across newspapers around the world. Almost a
century later, it is easy to understand the fascination with these
two remarkable women. Marguerite was a highly respectable and
recently widowed American journalist and socialite from Baltimore;
Stan was a runaway, a bohemian artist and dancer of British
heritage who left her wealthy, religious family to make a life for
herself in the expatriate community in Florence. The two women were
very different, yet both were strong-willed, independent and highly
ambitious women unafraid of taking risks. And both, as the Great
War ended and Central Europe dissolved into violent chaos, were
looking for adventure. Their paths first crossed in war-ravaged
Berlin during the Armistice and the the Spartacist Uprising in
1919. Fellow travellers, they became friends and, the evidence
suggests, lovers. Dodging bullets and interviewing colourful
characters in war-torn Europe led these intrepid women, separately,
to Bolshevik Russia, a country closed to outsiders since the
October Revolution of 1917. Their fateful meeting had repercussions
that spanned three decades, involving heads of state and
politicians in Britain, the United States and Soviet Russia. The
Lady is a Spy tells their forgotten story: that of two women who,
far in advance of their time, worked as foreign correspondents, who
operated as spies in dangerous shadowlands of international
politics, and who were both imprisoned in Lubyanka, one of the most
desperate places on earth. Their lives are reconstructed through
numerous primary sources, not only the poems, diaries and letters
of their friends and lovers, but also government documents
(including newly declassified US State Department papers) that
reveal the truth about their espionage careers and - in one case -
evidence of a shocking betrayal.
In June 1942, Anne Frank received a red-and-white-checked diary
for her thirteenth birthday, just weeks before she and her family
went into hiding in an Amsterdam attic to escape the Nazis. For two
years, with ever-increasing maturity, Anne crafted a memoir that
has become one of the most compelling documents of modern history.
But Anne Frank's diary, argues Francine Prose, is as much a work of
art as it is a historical record. Through close reading, she
marvels at the teenage Frank's skillfully natural narrative voice,
at her finely tuned dialogue and ability to turn living people into
characters.
Anne Frank: The Book, The Life, The Afterlife tells the
extraordinary story of the book that became a force in the world.
Along the way, Prose definitively establishes that Anne Frank was
not an accidental author or a casual teenage chronicler but a
writer of prodigious talent and ambition.
Few figures in British history have been so deeply and so consequentially involved with the British royal family as Winston Spencer Churchill. While numerous men of stature have advised kings and queens during their reigns, Churchill is unique in his role: helping to shape not only a reign, but an entire royal dynasty. However, it was by no means a seamless relationship. At times, the royal family treated him with suspicion and contempt; at others, their relations were avuncular, competitive and cheering. Yet whether he was playing the role of antagonist to the royal family or that of trusted confidante, Churchill's influence was central to the twentieth-century history of the British monarchy. The attitudes of the royal family towards him, whether warm or icy, were also crucial in creating the legend of Winston Churchill. The House of Windsor helped shape his career and his legacy: from his young days receiving paternal advice from Edward VII; his middle years of diehard loyalty to King Edward VIII during the abdication crisis; his initially grudging but ultimately fruitful partnership with George VI during World War II; to his enduring fondness for young Elizabeth, the last sovereign he served. While there have been many biographies of Winston Churchill on the one hand, and many volumes on members of the royal family on the other, none of these has yet charted the relationship between Churchill and the royal family itself, even though these partnerships shaped and defined the House of Windsor and modern Britain. In short, the history of the monarchy in the twentieth century cannot be fully understood without reference to Winston Churchill, and Churchill's life and legacy cannot be adequately appreciated without accounting for his relationship with the royal family.
Having unearthed much under-appreciated material relating to Churchill held in the Churchill Archives at Cambridge University - including diary entries, postcards, and letters to and from kings, queens and princes - Andrew Morton presents a meticulously researched dual biography of Winston Churchill and the House of Windsor. It is a drama of the first order. At times thrilling and always compelling: this is the saga of a man, a family, a beloved institution, and a regal dynasty.
He was known simply as the Blind Traveler. A solitary, sightless
adventurer, James Holman (1786-1857) fought the slave trade in
Africa, survived a frozen captivity in Siberia, hunted rogue
elephants in Ceylon, helped chart the Australian outback--and,
astonishingly, circumnavigated the globe, becoming one of the
greatest wonders of the world he so sagaciously explored. A Sense
of the World is a spellbinding and moving rediscovery of one of
history's most epic lives--a story to awaken our own senses of awe
and wonder.
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