Fr. 25.90

Master of Deception - The Wartime Adventures of Peter Fleming

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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Framed through the life of Peter Fleming this book offers an in-depth study of British intelligence operations in the Far East during World War II. This biography ranges from the personal life of Fleming such as his marriage to Celia Johnson, a famous actor of the time, to his extensive military intelligence career which took him from Norway and Greece to the Far East.

List of contents

Chapter One: A New Elizabethan
Chapter Two: Plans and More Plans
Chapter Three: To War in the Frozen North
Chapter Four: A Very British Guerrilla
Chapter Five: A Greek Tragedy
Chapter Six: A Summons to India
Chapter Seven: Burmese Capers and Haversack Ruses
Chapter Eight: Global Strategists and Strategems
Chapter Nine: Dining with Chinese Dragons
Chapter Ten: Total Intelligence: A Common Sense Approach
Chapter Eleven: Building the Organisation
Chapter Twelve: Sleight of Hand in the Order of the Battle
Chapter Thirteen: The Conjurors Take to the Field
Chapter Fourteen: Feints and Noises Off
Chapter Fifteen: The Double Agents' Impressario
Chapter Sixteen: Imaginary Spies and Fantasy Networks
Chapter Seventeen: The Bright Eye of Danger: A Chance with the Chindits
Chapter Eighteen: Enough of War Crimes
Chapter Nineteen: Home is the Hunter

About the author

Alan Ogden is currently the archivist of the Grenadier Guards and a lecturer for Martin Randall Travel. His work has focused on the S.O.E in Burma and has been received to critical acclaim.

Summary

Master of Deception is a biography of Peter Fleming, elder brother of Ian Fleming, creator of James Bond. Peter Fleming worked as a travel writer and journalist, serving with distinction throughout World War II and played a crucial role in British intelligence operations in the Far East. This biography ranges from the personal life of Fleming such as his marriage to Celia Johnson, a famous actor of the time, to his extensive military intelligence career which took him from Norway and Greece to the Far East. Framed through the life of Peter Fleming this book offers an in-depth study of British intelligence operations in the Far East during World War II.

Foreword

A biography exploring the adventure-filled life of Peter Fleming including his crucial role in the British intelligence operations of World War II.

Additional text

Alan Ogden's masterly study of Peter Fleming, a man as brilliant as a Second World War intelligence officer (and brother of the better-known Ian) as a Times journalist, is a book about military intelligence at its best during the Second World War.
Fleming's plans for 'stay behind' guerrilla units in Sussex and Kent (to fight the Wehrmacht on British soil, had the Nazis invaded Britain), his courageous (and highly explosive) acts of sabotage against the advancing German forces in Greece, as well as the intricate and intellectually refined strategies of deception and future 'Imperial Intelligence' that he developed to help win the war in the Far East, make this crisp study of the breadth and the depth of Fleming's skills a gripping introduction to the field.

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