Code Name Pauline: Memoirs of a World War II Special Agent
In 1943 a British Special Operations Executive (SOE) report called agent-in-training Pearl Witherington “cool and resourceful and extremely determined” and “the best shot, male or female, we have yet had.” Soon after, 29-year-old Witherington parachuted into Nazi-occupied France and posed as a...
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In 1943 a British Special Operations Executive (SOE) report called agent-in-training Pearl Witherington “cool and resourceful and extremely determined” and “the best shot, male or female, we have yet had.” Soon after, 29-year-old Witherington parachuted into Nazi-occupied France and posed as a traveling cosmetics saleswoman to make her way around the country as an SOE courier. When the leader of her network was caught by the Gestapo, she became “Pauline” and rose to command a 3,500-strong band of French Resistance fighters. She went on to become one of the most celebrated female agents in SOE history. In Code Name Pauline Witherington’s remarkable story is told in her own words. In a series of reminiscences she describes her difficult childhood and harrowing escape from France in 1940, her recruitment and training as a special agent, the logistics and dangers of working as an undercover courier, failed and successful attempts at sabotaging the Nazis, and much more. Editor Kathryn J. Atwood provides helpful context and background on the SOE and the French Resistance. Also included are an annotated list of key figures; an appendix of original, unedited interview extracts; and previously unpublished photographs and documents.
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Format: hardcover
ISBN:
9781613744871 (1613744870)
Publish date: August 1st 2013
Publisher: Chicago Review Press
Pages no: 208
Edition language: English
Category:
Non Fiction,
Autobiography,
Memoir,
Biography,
History,
Cultural,
War,
Spy Thriller,
Espionage,
France,
World War II
It is fact-filled, dry and unemotional. Something you tend to see/read often in first hand accounts of wartime and/or combat situations. I don't think people really comprehend the level of fear, anxiety and trauma that soldiers and non-military went through and indeed still go through. The only thin...