Not quite sure how to raise your standards from undergrad level to post-grad
level? This book suggests strategies and methods for making sure you meet the
standards expected of postgraduate study.
John Lodwick (1916-1959) was one of the great novelists of the early twentieth
century. Yet his novels, and indeed his own extraordinary life story, have
been virtually lost to the mists of time. Geoffrey Elliott here, for the first
time, pieces together Lodwick's eventful life, from his youth in Ireland, to
his wartime experiences in the SOE and Special Boat Service, his subsequent
literary career and his untimely death in a car crash in Spain at the age of
just 43. Initially acclaimed by Somerset Maugham and Anthony Burgess, soon
after his death Lodwick's novels fell out of fashion and they have largely
remained out-of-print since. Elliott makes the case for a revival in the
fortunes of this singular English novelist, in a biography which sheds new
light on the early twentieth century literary scene, the surrealist art world
and the real-life experiences of World War II.
Dangerous Games is the remarkable story of two cousins, Lisa Hill [1900-96]
and Lily Sergueiew [1912-50], born into prosperous families in pre-Revolution
St Petersburg. .
'A fascinating account of an extraordinary father by his son.' Lord Rees-Mogg Who was Major Kavan Elliott? Womaniser, rogue, wartime saboteur, peacetime spy - even all of these?Behind the cover of a seemingly respectable business career, Elliott was entangled in a complex web of deception, glamorous women, Communist double agents and interrogation at the hands of the Gestapo and Hungarian secret police. Was the man who dropped blind into Serbia in 1942 on a mission for SOE a courageous daredevil or a philandering scoundrel? This is the extraordinary true story of the quest undertaken by Kavan Elliott's son to discover the truth about his father. From the torture chambers of Budapest to the classified archives of the British Secret Intelligence Service, I Spy reveals an astonishing legacy of espionage, betrayal, romance and double-dealing. This Faber Finds edition includes a new afterword by Geoffrey Elliot, drawing on hitherto secret documents.
They record something more than a byway in the history of the cold war, a true
contribution to British history.' Michael Bourdeaux, Times Higher Education
Supplement'An engaging, quirky account of this strange offshoot of the Cold
War ...