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Jennet Conant

    Jennet Conantová je americká autorka literatury faktu a novinářka, která se specializuje na neotřelé pohledy na události druhé světové války. Její práce vyniká pečlivým výzkumem a poutavým vyprávěním, které čtenáře vtahuje do klíčových momentů konfliktu. Conantová se zaměřuje na méně známé postavy a skryté příběhy, čímž odhaluje složitost a lidskost v srdci historických událostí. Její styl je analytický, ale zároveň přístupný, což z ní činí respektovanou autorku v oblasti populárně naučné literatury.

    The Irregulars
    Tuxedo Park
    The Great Secret
    • The Great Secret

      • 400 stránek
      • 14 hodin čtení

      The gripping story of a chemical weapons catastrophe, its cover-up, and how one army doctor's discovery led to the development of chemotherapy.

      The Great Secret2020
      4,0
    • The Irregulars

      Roald Dahl and the British Spy Ring in Wartime Washington

      • 418 stránek
      • 15 hodin čtení

      Describes the covert intelligence operations of allied forces during World War II as experienced by wounded RAF pilot Roald Dahl, a patriot who used his charm and wits to infiltrate the upper reaches of Georgetown society and influence U.S. policy in favor of England.

      The Irregulars2008
      3,4
    • Tuxedo Park

      A Wall Street Tycoon and the Secret Palace of Science That Changed the Course of World War II

      • 352 stránek
      • 13 hodin čtení

      This must have been an extremely difficult book to write. Its subject, Alfred Loomis, never gave interviews during his lifetime and destroyed all his papers before his death. "Few men of Loomis' prominence and achievement have gone to greater lengths to foil history," writes author Jennet Conant. Had he not done these things, his name would be better known--and this probably wouldn't be the first biography about him. So who was Alfred Loomis? "He was too complex to categorize--financier, philanthropist, society figure, physicist, inventor, amateur, dilettante--a contradiction in terms," writes Conant. Loomis established a private laboratory in New York and hired scientists whose work in the 1930s wound up making possible both the radar and the atomic bomb. These developments were essential to Allied victory in the Second World War. Conant is perhaps the only person who could have pierced Loomis's obsessive secrecy and written this book; she grew up with Loomis's children and other members of his family. Her grandfather, Harvard president James Bryant Conant, was one of Loomis's scientists. Tuxedo Park is an important book about the development of military technology in the United States; admirers of The Making of the Atomic Bomb by Richard Rhodes and similar titles won't want to miss it. --John Miller

      Tuxedo Park2002
      3,8