Kathryn J. Atwood
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KathrynAtwood
Kathryn Atwood has been seen on America: Fact vs. Fiction; heard on BBC America; spoken at the First Division Museum at Cantigny Park and the Atlanta History Center; and her writing has appeared in The Historian, Vietnam War Magazine, and War, Literature & the Arts. She occasionally blogs here at...
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Kathryn Atwood has been seen on America: Fact vs. Fiction; heard on BBC America; spoken at the First Division Museum at Cantigny Park and the Atlanta History Center; and her writing has appeared in The Historian, Vietnam War Magazine, and War, Literature & the Arts. She occasionally blogs here at Booklikes; posts too many photos on Instagram (KathrynAtwood2016); and lists all her obscure book awards on her Linkedin profile.
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I have always disliked that women are not as remembered as much as men who did the same thing as them in history. I do understand that women were not as empowered as they are today, but I also know that there had to be some awesome ladies who do awesome things. This book is abou those women during h...
Here is a book that would serve as an ideal primer for anyone wanting to know of the contributions made by women during the Second World War in the fight against the Third Reich. In particular, the personal stories of Noor Inayat Khan (who served as an agent in Britain's Special Operations Executiv...
This book is a collection of stories about some truly remarkable women who performed a variety of roles during the First World War - from nurses to spies/leaders of resistance networks behind enemy lines, doctors and surgeons, journalists, to soldiers on the battlefield (e.g., the Russian Army had w...
Disclaimer: I have been Goodreads friends with Kathryn Atwood prior to the publication of her first book. Additionally, a few weeks ago, she asked if I would like a review copy of this book. The question came after I had ordered this copy. The only thing wrong with this book and...
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...