Resistance and Betrayal: The Death and Life of Jean Moulin, the Greatest Hero of the French Resistance Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

Resistance and Betrayal: The Death and Life of Jean Moulin, the Greatest Hero of the French Resistance Book

â??Enthralling and intelligent, a masterly exploration ofthe sinister labyrinth that was wartime France . . .It is a remarkable book, utterly fascinating.â?â??Allan MassieNot long after 2:00 p.m. on June 21, 1943, eight men met in secret at a doctorâ??s house in Lyon. They represented the warring factions of the French Resistance and had been summoned by General de Gaulleâ??s new envoy, a man most of them knew simply as â??Max.â? Minutes after the last man entered the house, the Gestapo broke in, led by Klaus Barbie, the infamous â??Butcher of Lyon.â? The fate awaiting Barbieâ??s prisoners was torture, deportation, and death. â??Maxâ? was tortured sadistically but never broke: he took his many secrets to his grave. In that moment, the legend of Jean Moulin was born. Who betrayed Jean Moulin? And who was this enigmatic hero, a man as skilled in deception as he was in acts of heroism? After the war, his ashes were transferred to the Panthéonâ??Franceâ??s highest honorâ??where his memory is revered alongside that of Voltaire and Victor Hugo. But Moulinâ??s story is full of unanswered questions: the truth of his life is far more complicated than the legend conveniently manufactured by de Gaulle. Resistance and Betrayal tells for the first time in English the epic story of Franceâ??s greatest war hero, a Schindler-like character of ambiguous motivation. A winner of the Marsh Prize for biography, praised by Graham Greene and Julian Barnes, Patrick Marnham is a brilliant storyteller with a keen appreciation for the complex maze of moral compromises navigated in times of war. Told with the drama and suspense of the best espionage fiction, Resistance and Betrayal brings to life the dark and duplicitous world of the French Resistance and offers a startling conclusion to one of the great unsolved mysteries of the Second World War.Praise for Patrick MarnhamFantastic Invasionâ??An exhilarating Swiftian excursion into human folly â??a brilliant book.â? â??Doris Lessingâ??A writer afoot with a ruthless vision and armed with a literary style which burns away the surface of what it describes . . .His main strength lies in his genius as a storyteller.â?â??Jonathan RabanThe Man Who Wasnâ??t Maigretâ??I doubt if there will be a better, or better-written, portrait of Simenon for a long time.â? â??Julian Barnesâ??I can confidently say there will never be a better book on this subject. It makes absolutely compulsive reading.â?â??A. N. Wilsonâ??Excellent, penetrating, fully researched and very well written . . . Adds to our understanding not only of Simenonâ??s art but ofthe art of the novel itself.â? â??Muriel SparkRead More

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  • 037550608X
  • 9780375506086
  • Patrick Marnham
  • 1 March 2002
  • Random House
  • Hardcover (Book)
  • 320
  • 1st Us
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