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Sarah Rose - Community Reviews back

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Toni
Toni rated it 6 years ago
The spies who armed the resistance, sabotaged the Nazis, and helped win World War 11 This is a dramatic true account of extraordinary women recruited by Britain who helped win the day on June 6, 1944 and pave the way for Allied victory.Drawn from declassified files, diaries and oral histories, as pe...
Books, Books and More Books
Books, Books and More Books rated it 6 years ago
D-DAY GIRLS by Sarah Rose I had to keep reminding myself that this was “real non-fiction” and keep reading. Unfortunately I had just read a fictionalized account of the resistance in France that covered many of the same women/events in this book. D-DAY GIRLS is well researched and well written. It d...
Bettie's Books
Bettie's Books rated it 11 years ago
bookshelves: nonfiction, autumn-2012, history, published-2009, biography, colonial-overlords, victorian, recreational-drugs, war, fraudio, china, india, gardening, pirates-smugglers-wreckers Read on November 05, 2012 Read by the author herself.Blurb - A dramatic historical narrative of the man wh...
Teiresias1960
Teiresias1960 rated it 12 years ago
Ms. Rose has written a very interesting popular history, that would have been strengthened with more detailed discussions of several subjects: e.g., the relationship between tea and opium, the tea manufacturing process, the playing out of the demise of the East India Co., and the rise of the tea cl...
Bettie's Books
Bettie's Books rated it 12 years ago
Read by the author herself.Blurb - A dramatic historical narrative of the man who stole the secret of tea from China.In 1848, the British East India Company, having lost its monopoly on the tea trade, engaged Robert Fortune, a Scottish gardener, botanist, and plant hunter, to make a clandestine trip...
Osho
Osho rated it 14 years ago
This history seemed scant compared to what I was expecting as the norm in the history/natural history/biography genre, though it had its moments. Overall, it was more biographical and much less informational than I hoped for. I would have been reasonably happy changing my expectations, but I'm surpr...
M.W. Gerard
M.W. Gerard rated it 14 years ago
As a self-proclaimed theic (one who is addicted to tea), I am thrilled someone, in modern times, has tackled this vast, interwoven tale of a name that changed so much but it little remembered. Tea is like wine. Growing seasons, climates, picking times, drying, storing and shipping all affect the...
Telynor's Library, and then some
Telynor's Library, and then some rated it 14 years ago
Interesting story, some things I had never heard about before, but I wished for more detail and a map tracing Robert Fortune's adventures in China. Three and a half stars rounded up to four. Somewhat recommended, but tea fanciers should enjoy this one. For the complete review, please go here:http:/...
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