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Operation Mincemeat: How a Dead Man and a Bizarre Plan Fooled the Nazis and Assured an Allied Victory
 
 
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Operation Mincemeat: How a Dead Man and a Bizarre Plan Fooled the Nazis and Assured an Allied Victory [Rauer Buchschnitt] [Englisch] [Gebundene Ausgabe]

Ben Macintyre
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Kindle Edition EUR 5,76  
Gebundene Ausgabe EUR 24,90  
Gebundene Ausgabe, Rauer Buchschnitt, 4. Mai 2010 --  
Taschenbuch EUR 11,90  
Audio CD, Audiobook, Ungekürzte Ausgabe EUR 27,69  

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Produktinformation

  • Gebundene Ausgabe: 416 Seiten
  • Verlag: Crown; Auflage: 1 (4. Mai 2010)
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • ISBN-10: 0307453278
  • ISBN-13: 978-0307453273
  • Größe und/oder Gewicht: 16,7 x 3,6 x 24,2 cm
  • Durchschnittliche Kundenbewertung: 5.0 von 5 Sternen  Alle Rezensionen anzeigen (3 Kundenrezensionen)
  • Amazon Bestseller-Rang: Nr. 326.096 in Englische Bücher (Siehe Top 100 in Englische Bücher)

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Produktbeschreibungen

Pressestimmen

Praise for the U.S. edition:

"Here, finally, is the complete story with its full cast of characters (not a dull one among them), pure cathnip to fans of World War II thrillers and a lot of fun for everyone else."
Joseph Kanon, Washington Post Book World

"Brilliant and almost absurdly entertaining…The cast of characters involved in Mincemeat, as the caper was called, was extraordinary, and Macintyre tells their stories with gusto."
Malcolm Gladwell, The New Yorker

"OPERATION MINCEMEAT is utterly, to employ a dead word, thrilling. But to call it thus is to miss the point slightly in terms of admiring it properly….What makes OPERATION MINCEMEAT so winning, in addition to Mr. Macintyre’s meticulous research and the layers of his historical understanding, is his elegant, jaunty, and very British high style."
Dwight Garner, New York Times

"Macintyre, whose previous book chronicled the incredible exploits of Eddie Chapman, the crook turned spy known as Zigzag, excels at this sort of twisted narrative….Great fun."
Jennet Conant, New York Times Book Review

"A nearly flawless true-life picaresque…zeroes in on one of the few times in war history when excessive literary imagination, instead of hobbling a clandestine enterprise, worked beyond its authors’ wildest dream….Almost inedibly rich with literary truffles—doppelgangers, obsession, transgression, self-fashioning….It is hard to oversate how cinematic this story really was."
New Republic

"Another true WWII tale that reads like something by Ian Fleming….the fullest account yet."
Entertainment Weekly

"London Times writer-at-large Macintyre offers a solid and entertaining updating of WWII's best-known 'human intelligence' operation....[and] recounts [the] adventures and misadventures with panache."
Publishers Weekly

"[An] edge-of-your-seat history....unveiling previously classified files and even unearthing living witnesses to the grand conspiracy."
Kirkus Reviews

"This retelling of a well-known part of World War II espionage history will appeal to military history buffs, especially those new to this particular episode, and to readers of adventure fiction, who will find it hard to put down."
Library Journal

#1 Sunday Times [London] Bestseller

Praise for the UK edition:

"A terrific book….Students of the second world war have been familiar with Mincemeat for many years, but Macintyre offers a mass of new detail, and enchanting pen portraits of the British, Spanish and German participants. His book is a rollicking read for all those who enjoy a spy story so fanciful that Ian Fleming—himself an officer in Montagu’s wartime department—would never have dared to invent it."
Max Hastings, The Sunday Times [London]

"A chillingly good book….Macintyre has taken a well-known story of wartime deception, embellished it, and shown that it was even more ingenious and even more risky than we had all supposed."
—The Spectator

"Fascinating ... The complexities and consequences of the story that Macintyre tells in OPERATION MINCEMEAT are compelling – a tribute to his impressive abilities as a sleuth (ones that we’ve witnessed in his previous books) and to his capacities as a writer. He has the instincts of a novelist rather than a historian when it comes to elision , exposition, narrative and pace, and is depiction of character is vividly alive to nuance and idiosyncrasy. Like the best novelists, he understands that all people are fundamentally individual – odd and unique to themselves – and that stereotypes exist only in bad fiction, whether on the page or on screen."
William Boyd, The Times [London]
 
"Ben Macintyre turns up trumps in this rollicking tale of a second world war mission to dupe the Germans by using a corpse bearing fictional military plans ... The cast of characters is irresistible, and Macintyre’s enthusiasm for them richly merited ... a terrific book with exceptional photographs of everybody, including the corpse. Students of the second world war have been familiar with Mincemeat for many years, but Macintyre offers a mass of new detail, and enchanting pen portraits of the British, Spanish and German participants. His book is a rollicking read for all those who enjoy a spy story so fanciful that Ian Fleming – himself an officer in Montagu’s wartime department – would never have dared to invent it."
Max Hastings, The Sunday Times [London]

"Macintyre has a journalist’s nose for a great story, and a novelist’s skill in its narration. If anything, Operation Mincemeat is even more spellbinding than his previous story of wartime espionage, Agent Zigzag, with a cast-list every bit as dotty and colourful ... Macintyre is a master of the thumbnail character sketch."
Craig Brown, ‘Book of the Week’, The Mail on Sunday

"The Times's associate editor, Ben Macintyre, also the author of the acclaimed Agent Zigzag, is fast becoming a one-man industry in these updated tales of cunning, bravery and skulduggery. With his mix of meticulous research and a good hack's eye for narrative, it is hard to think of a better guide to keep beckoning us back to that fascinating world ... In the story of the homeless Welsh vagrant, Glyndwr Michael, whose body proved so much more worthwhile in death than in life, there is enough pathos and tragedy to remind you that you're reading real life-or-death stuff, influencing the outcome of the entire war, rather than enjoying a rollicking novel, rollicking though the book often is. There's romance, and glamour, and even the splendidly named Sir Bentley Purchase, the cheerfully black-humoured coroner of St Pancras who (illegally) colluded in the procurement of the body. It's hard not to feel, sometimes, that you are reading of impossibly distant times, when men, even dead men, were real men, rather than overgrown toddlers ... The shock is not that this all happened, but that it wasn't so very long ago."
—The Observer [London]

"Ben Macintyre skilfully breathes life into the diverse cast of characters involved in the plan, imaginatively fleshing out the colourful personalities on both sides ... a diverting account of a pivotal moment in history."
—Metro

Kurzbeschreibung

Ben Macintyre’s Agent Zigzag was hailed as “rollicking, spellbinding” (New York Times), “wildly improbable but entirely true” (Entertainment Weekly), and, quite simply, “the best book ever written” (Boston Globe). In his new book, Operation Mincemeat, he tells an extraordinary story that will delight his legions of fans.

In 1943, from a windowless basement office in London, two brilliant intelligence officers conceived a plan that was both simple and complicated— Operation Mincemeat. The purpose? To deceive the Nazis into thinking that Allied forces were planning to attack southern Europe by way of Greece or Sardinia, rather than Sicily, as the Nazis had assumed, and the Allies ultimately chose.
 
Charles Cholmondeley of MI5 and the British naval intelligence officer Ewen Montagu could not have been more different. Cholmondeley was a dreamer seeking adventure. Montagu was an aristocratic, detail-oriented barrister. But together they were the perfect team and created an ingenious plan: Get a corpse, equip it with secret (but false and misleading) papers concerning the invasion, then drop it off the coast of Spain where German spies would, they hoped, take the bait. The idea was approved by British intelligence officials, including Ian Fleming (creator of James Bond). Winston Churchill believed it might ring true to the Axis and help bring victory to the Allies.

Filled with spies, double agents, rogues, fearless heroes, and one very important corpse, the story of Operation Mincemeat reads like an international thriller.

Unveiling never-before-released material, Ben Macintyre brings the reader right into the minds of intelligence officers, their moles and spies, and the German Abwehr agents who suffered the “twin frailties of wishfulness and yesmanship.” He weaves together the eccentric personalities of Cholmondeley and Montagu and their near-impossible feats into a riveting adventure that not only saved thousands of lives but paved the way for a pivotal battle in Sicily and, ultimately, Allied success in the war.

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Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
Operation Mincemeat

Ben Macintyre hat in sauberer Recherche eine der bedeutendsten Irreführungen im Zweiten Weltkrieg dargestellt: die Operation Mincemeat (=Hackfleisch). Unter diesem skurrilen Namen verbirgt sich eine ebenso bizarre wie letzten Endes erfolgreiche Kriegslist des britischen Militärgeheimdienstes. Nach erfolgreicher Landung der Alliierten in Nordafrika stand als nächste Aktion die Landung auf Sizilien auf dem Programm. Diese sollte verschleiert und die Achsenmächte sollten auf die Wahrscheinlichkeit einer Landung in Griechenland und in Sardinien hingelenkt werden.

Dazu dachten sich zwei ingeniöse Geheimdienstler, Ewen Montagu. im Zivilberuf Bankier, und Charles Cholmondeley (gesprochen Chumley), Fliegeroffizier mit Augenleiden, das ihn zur Führung eines Flugzeugs untauglich machte, den Plan aus, einen als Offizier der Marines verkleideten Leiche eines walisischen Arbeitslosen mit geheim wirkenden gefälschten Schriftstücken auszustatten und durch ein U-Boot nahe der spanischen Hafenstadt Huelva im Meer zu versenken, in der Hoffnung, dass die "Geheimdokumente" durch deutschfreundliche Franco-Behörden in die Hände der deutschen Abwehr gelangten. Dies geschah letztlich auch und die deutschen Stellen bis zu Hitler hinauf fielen auf diesen Trick herein.

Diese in der Zusammenfassung einfach wirkende Aktion war bei ihrer Verwirklichung mit einer Vielzahl von Fallstricken versehen die alle für sich allein, vor allem aber in ihrer Gesamtheit den Erfolg hätte in Frage stellen können. Ben Macintyre beschreibt in großer Detailgenauigkeit alle die Hindernisse, die dem Erfolg im Wege standen, von der Besorgung einer passenden Leiche bis zur Authentifizierung der Geheimdokumente. Daneben schildert er auf eine recht lebensnahe Weise die handelnden Personen auf englischer wie auch auf deutscher Seite. Gerade diese Einschübe über das soziale Umfeld der Akteure machen das Buch für den Leser interessant, vermindern aber in keiner Weise die Spannung der brilliant beschriebenen Handlung.

Leider ist bisher über eine Übersetzung ins Deutsche nichts bekannt. So empfehle ich jedem des Englischen mächtigen Leser sich auf diese abenteuerliche Schicksalsreise in der Originalsprache zu begeben.
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Superbly written! 15. Mai 2012
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe|Von Amazon bestätigter Kauf
A true story, the facts pieced together with history of world, the intrigue as well as personal cameos. A masterpiece.
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Von Donald Mitchell TOP 500 REZENSENT
Format:Taschenbuch
"The sea gave up the dead who were in it," -- Revelation 20:13 (NKJV)

In spy novels, genius plans come together quickly and are implemented with only a few glitches that the heroes quickly overcome. Oh, that it was that easy.

If you have never read the story about how British Intelligence fooled Hitler into shifting his forces away from Sicily before the invasion there, I can highly recommend this account, which is informed by more detailed sources than earlier versions. If you have already read extensively about the subject, you may not find enough new here to reward your time and attention.

I knew about the story from my college studies about World War II. When I realized that this book drew on many formerly secret papers about the events, I knew it was time for an enjoyable read. I wasn't disappointed.

The best parts of the book come in exploring and explaining what went wrong . . . and how the thinly disguised deception worked in spite of its flaws and errors. I don't recall a better book concerning how those who receive intelligence reports can mislead themselves into making the wrong steps. I'm reminded of the reports that eventually came out about how Stalin continually dismissed the remarkable intelligence he was receiving from British and American spies.

If you like human interest, you'll enjoy learning about the details of how such deceptions were thought up and developed. If you don't really care about the details of who did what and when, you'll think this book is too detailed in telling how the plot was hatched and executed in London and Spain.

As a true story, it has more emotional resonance than any spy thriller I've read. I had a smile on my face on most pages. I believe that you will, too.

"Oh, what a tangled web we weave
When first we practise to deceive!" -- Sir Walter Scott
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