Lisbon: War in the Shadows of the City of Light, 1939-1945
Autor Neill Locheryen Limba Engleză Paperback – 29 oct 2012
Lisbon
had
a
pivotal
role
in
the
history
of
World
War
II,
though
not
a
gun
was
fired
there.
The
only
European
city
in
which
both
the
Allies
and
the
Axis
power
operated
openly,
it
was
temporary
home
to
much
of
Europe's
exiled
royalty,
over
one
million
refugees
seeking
passage
to
the
U.S.,
and
a
host
of
spies,
secret
police,
captains
of
industry,
bankers,
prominent
Jews,
writers
and
artists,
escaped
POWs,
and
black
marketeers.
An
operations
officer
writing
in
1944
described
the
daily
scene
at
Lisbon's
airport
as
being
like
the
movie
“Casablanca,”
times
twenty.
In
this
riveting
narrative,
renowned
historian
Neill
Lochery
draws
on
his
relationships
with
high-level
Portuguese
contacts,
access
to
records
recently
uncovered
from
Portuguese
secret
police
and
banking
archives,
and
other
unpublished
documents
to
offer
a
revelatory
portrait
of
the
War's
back
stage.
And
he
tells
the
story
of
how
Portugal,
a
relatively
poor
European
country
trying
frantically
to
remain
neutral
amidst
extraordinary
pressures,
survived
the
war
not
only
physically
intact
but
significantly
wealthier.
The
country's
emergence
as
a
prosperous
European
Union
nation
would
be
financed
in
part,
it
turns
out,
by
a
cache
of
Nazi
gold.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781610391887
ISBN-10: 1610391888
Pagini: 344
Ilustrații: 24-pp. B/W photo insert on gloss
Dimensiuni: 154 x 232 x 26 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: PublicAffairs
Colecția PublicAffairs
ISBN-10: 1610391888
Pagini: 344
Ilustrații: 24-pp. B/W photo insert on gloss
Dimensiuni: 154 x 232 x 26 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: PublicAffairs
Colecția PublicAffairs
Notă biografică
Neill
Lochery,
PhD,
is
a
world-renowned
source
on
Israel,
the
Middle
East,
and
Mediterranean
history.
He
is
the
author
of
five
books
and
countless
newspaper
and
magazine
articles.
He
regularly
appears
on
television
in
the
UK,
the
USA,
and
the
Middle
East.
He
is
currently
based
at
University
College
London
and
regularly
gives
talks
in
the
UK,
Europe,
the
Middle
East,
and
North
America.
Recenzii
“’Lisbon’
is
a
valuable
source
of
information
about
an
astonishing
time
and
place.”
Columbia
Daily
News
featured
in
roundup
of
history
books:
“A
fascinating
account
of
one
of
the
back
stages
of
the
War.
Lisbon
was
a
hotbed
of
intrigue
and
espionage
while
remaining
neutral
as
the
world
fought
around
it.”\
Macleans
“LikeCasablanca,only
20
times
more.”
Express Milwaukee
“Fascinating.”
The
Scotsman,
four-star
review
“Intrigue,
betrayal,
opportunism
and
double
dealing’
Lochery
promises
us
–
and
his
engrossing
book
delivers
all
those
things
and
more.”
"The twists and turns of Salazar's tight-rope diplomacy form the central thread of Neill Lochery's impressive account of wartime Lisbon and its leader... The personalities, plots and counterplots within that tale are absorbing... The book's principal worth lies in its illumination of Salazar, who emerges from Lochery's pages as a fascinating, tireless and single-minded figure."
Jill Jolliffe,
Publishers Weekly
“Lochery tells the gripping story of the city known as ‘Casablanca II’…engrossing and rewarding.”
Booklist,
September
20,
2011
“Lochery
recounts
wartime
happenings
in
the
Portuguese
capital
of
Lisbon,
where
the
Allies
and
the
Axis
conducted
the
war
through
espionage,
propaganda,
and
diplomatic
pressure
on
Salazar
to
relinquish
Portugal’s
neutrality.
A
cloak-and-dagger
atmosphere
accordingly
suffuses
Lochery’s
account….
A
productive
archival
sleuth,
[he]
makes
original
contributions
to
the
literature
of
neutrality
in
WWII.”
Shelf
Awareness
“A
lively,
accessible
and
hair-raising
history
revealing
every
sordid
detail
of
Lisbon
during
World
War
II--a
time
and
place
that
many
have
chosen
to
forget
in
order
to
save
face.”
Wall
Street
Journal
“Evocative….
[Lochery]
skillfully
documents
the
experiences
of
the
rich
and
glamorous
as
well
as
the
less
fortunate
and
even
sinister
of
the
city’s
war
time
arrivals…
Distilling
an
enormous
quantity
of
research,
he
has
rendered
a
fascinating
and
readable
account
of
this
small
country’s
role
in
World
War
II,
protected,
as
it
was,
by
its
wily
champion.”
Seattle
Times