Knihobot

Benjamin Heath Malkin

    Bureaucratic Fanatics
    Punk Revolution!
    The Scenery, Antiquities And Biography Of South Wales V2 (1807)
    A Father's Memoirs of his Child
    Classical Disquisitions and Curiosities, Critical and Historical
    The Liar: How a Double Agent in the CIA Became the Cold War's Last Honest Man
    • The Cold War meets Mad Men in form of Karel Koechner, the most successful double agent who lived a life of shifting morals and blow-out hedonism from New York to Moscow. In the mid-1970s, the CIA and KGB both suspected Karel Koecher was working for the enemy. They were both right. With his wife Hana, Koecher arrived in the US as a KGB agent, posing as an anti-communist defector, and he soon learned that performing well in academia was the fastest path to the CIA. After graduating from Columbia he swiftly entered the ranks of the CIA, becoming a double agent during the height of the cold war. The Koechers eventually embraced the 1970s Manhattan high life -- cocaine, swinging, parties. Hana made money as a diamond dealer, occasionally relaying messages to Karel's handlers. The Koechers' lifestyle reflected both the times and their risk-taking. It was the apex of Karel's career, spy by day, swinger by night. The Koechers made it and even the once shy Hana got carried away with the euphoria. Life is good, and the Koechers felt unstoppable. But it was too good to last. Using newly declassified documents, interrogation tapes and extraordinary first-hand accounts from the Koechers themselves, Cunningham reconstructs their double lives and the fading Cold War, where a strange moral fog made it hard to know what truth was being fought for, and to what end.

      The Liar: How a Double Agent in the CIA Became the Cold War's Last Honest Man
    • This antiquarian book is a facsimile reprint of an original work, reflecting its historical significance. While it may contain imperfections like marks and notations due to its age, the reprint aims to preserve the cultural value of the text. It is part of an initiative to protect and promote literature, ensuring accessibility to high-quality editions that remain true to the original.

      The Scenery, Antiquities And Biography Of South Wales V2 (1807)
    • This is the most wide-ranging and provocative look at punk rock as a social change movement over the past forty-five years, told through first-hand accounts of roughly 250 musicians and activists. John Malkin brings together punk's most famous figures as well as underground voices, creating a new and insightful history of punk throughout the ages.

      Punk Revolution!
    • Bureaucratic Fanatics

      Modern Literature and the Passions of Rationalization

      Bureaucracy, once considered moderate and mild, drives people wild. It provokes both a rational fanaticism for more bureaucracy and a fanaticism that would, if only it could, do away with it once and for all. This confusion of rationalization and ex

      Bureaucratic Fanatics
    • The Kilometre Millionaire

      • 304 stránek
      • 11 hodin čtení

      In this book, leading member of the Railway Performance Society Alan Varley discusses and analyzes a lifetime of railway travel across the French Railways (SNCF) network - over a million kilometers worth! The performance of different types of train is assessed on the wide variety of routes on which they operated, giving the opportunity to see the impact of modernization, first from steam to diesel, and latterly to the dedicated high speed lines of the Trains a Grande Vitesse (TGV).

      The Kilometre Millionaire
    • William Blake (1757-1827), hailed as 'the glorious luminary' by William Rossetti, is one of the great mystics in the history of Western art. This volume brings together some of the most illuminating writings by people who knew Blake, and brings this astonishing visionary to life

      Lives of Blake