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The Lawn Road Flats - Spies, Writers and Artists (Hardcover)
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The Lawn Road Flats - Spies, Writers and Artists (Hardcover)
Series: History of British Intelligence
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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The story of a modernist building with a significant place in the
history of Soviet espionage in Britain, where communist spies
rubbed shoulders with British artists, sculptors and writers The
Isokon building, Lawn Road Flats, in Belsize Park on Hampstead's
lower slopes, is a remarkable building. The first modernist
building in Britain to use reinforced concrete in domestic
architecture, its construction demanded new building techniques.
But the building was as remarkable for those who took up residence
there as for the application of revolutionary building techniques.
There were 32 Flats in all, and they became a haunt of some of the
most prominent Soviet agents working against Britain in the 1930s
and 40s, among them Arnold Deutsch, the controller of the group of
Cambridge spies who came to be known as the "Magnificent Five"
after the Western movie The Magnificent Seven; the photographer
Edith Tudor-Hart; and Melita Norwood, the longest-serving Soviet
spy in British espionage history. However, it wasn't only spies who
were attracted to the Lawn Road Flats, the Bauhaus exiles Walter
Gropius, Laszlo Moholy-Nagy and Marcel Breuer; the pre-historian V.
Gordon Childe; and the poet (and Bletchley Park intelligence
officer) Charles Brasch all made their way there. A number of
British artists, sculptors andwriters were also drawn to the Flats,
among them the sculptor and painter Henry Moore; the novelist
Nicholas Monsarrat; and the crime writer Agatha Christie, who wrote
her only spy novel N or M? in the Flats. The Isokon buildingboasted
its own restaurant and dining club, where many of the Flats' most
famous residents rubbed shoulders with some of the most dangerous
communist spies ever to operate in Britain. Agatha Christie often
said that she invented her characters from what she observed going
on around her. With the Kuczynskis - probably the most successful
family of spies in the history of espionage - in residence, she
would have had plenty of material. DAVID BURKEis a historian of
intelligence and international relations and author of The Spy Who
Came In From the Co-op: Melita Norwood and the Ending of Cold War
Espionage (The Boydell Press, 2009).
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