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Patrick Bishop (1) (1952–)

Autor von Fighter Boys: The Battle of Britain, 1940

Andere Autoren mit dem Namen Patrick Bishop findest Du auf der Unterscheidungs-Seite.

22 Werke 1,391 Mitglieder 15 Rezensionen Lieblingsautor von 1 Lesern

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Patrick Bishop has emerged in the last decade as one of Britain's best-regarded military historians with his books Fighter Boys and Bomber Boys, which cast a new light on the men who flew in the Battle of Britain and the Strategic Air Campaign, as well as 3 Para, which follows British troops in the mehr anzeigen 2006 battle in Helmand. He is also the author of two novels. weniger anzeigen
Bildnachweis: Ian Jones

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Geburtstag
1952
Geschlecht
male
Nationalität
UK
Geburtsort
London, England, UK
Wohnorte
London, England, UK

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I enjoyed this. An interesting account ofl ie at Eton and Oxford before the famous escape from Colditz. Enjoyed also the account of Neave's political life.
Engaging and well paced.
 
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PGWilliams71 | Jan 31, 2021 |
A brilliant one volume summary of the RAF in World War Two. This covers basic training, to the Battle of Britain, the bombing war, the desert war & the Far East conflict. It deals with people rather than the events, and gives a real feeling of what it was like to experience the conflict through the prism of the Air Force. Highly recommended for those that like history,
Memoirs, World War Two or the RAF.
 
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aadyer | Jun 13, 2020 |
This is the story of the killing of Avraham “Yair” Stern, the leader of the Jewish underground group in Palestine that bore his name, by a British police officer in Tel Aviv in 1942. Patrick Bishop is an accomplished historian and this book is exceptionally well-written and well-researched.

It is a very difficult subject to tackle, as it deals with conflicting narratives. From the point of view of the British, Stern was a “Chicago gangster” who needed to be “liquidated”. To his followers, Stern was a freedom fighter. One of those followers, Yitzhak Shamir, eventually became Israel’s prime minister and over time, Stern increasingly came to be seen as one of the country’s founding heroes. There is a state museum in his honour, and streets are named after him.

Patrick Bishop is not a big fan of Stern, to put it mildly, and this becomes increasingly clear as the book progresses. He describes Stern as something of a dandy, down to his silk socks, a negligent husband, vain, arrogant and a personal coward (he never seems to have fired a weapon and never took part in the operations carried out by his group). The British police officer, Morton, who killed him is portrayed as his opposite: a good, honest family man. The contrast could not be more striking.

The portrayal of Stern as entirely evil and Morton as entirely good falls apart in the final pages of the book. For more than 200 pages one is led to believe that Morton, like the mythological George Washington, could never tell a lie. The story he told was that Stern attempted to escape and was possibly going to trigger a bomb that would have killed everyone in the room. When this story was challenged by various historians, Morton sued them for libel — and all his suits were successful.

And yet more than four decades after Stern’s killing, one of the policemen in the room when Morton shot Stern came forward with a different narrative — one in which Morton deliberately killed the defenceless and unarmed Stern in cold blood.

The entire narrative about Morton’s spotlessly clean record fell apart as I read those final passages in the book. Well done to Patrick Bishop for fearlessly including evidence that undermines a simplistic view of the two men, Stern and Morton, who confronted each other on that fateful day.
… (mehr)
 
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ericlee | 1 weitere Rezension | Jan 26, 2020 |

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Werke
22
Mitglieder
1,391
Beliebtheit
#18,479
Bewertung
½ 3.7
Rezensionen
15
ISBNs
159
Sprachen
3
Favoriten
1

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