The Lady is a Spy: The Tangled Lives of Stan Harding and Marguerite Harrison (Paperback)
  • The Lady is a Spy: The Tangled Lives of Stan Harding and Marguerite Harrison (Paperback)
zoom

The Lady is a Spy: The Tangled Lives of Stan Harding and Marguerite Harrison (Paperback)

(author)
£17.99
Paperback 284 Pages
Published: 10/01/2019
  • In stock

Usually dispatched within 2-3 working days

  • This item has been added to your basket
Mention female spies, and most people think of Mata Hari. But during the Roaring Twenties, Marguerite Harrison and Stan Harding were the cause celebre: two beautiful, accomplished women whose names were splashed across newspapers around the world. Almost a century later, it is easy to understand the fascination with these two remarkable women. Marguerite was a highly respectable and recently widowed American journalist and socialite from Baltimore; Stan was a runaway, a bohemian artist and dancer of British heritage who left her wealthy, religious family to make a life for herself in the expatriate community in Florence. The two women were very different, yet both were strong-willed, independent and highly ambitious women unafraid of taking risks. And both, as the Great War ended and Central Europe dissolved into violent chaos, were looking for adventure. Their paths first crossed in war-ravaged Berlin during the Armistice and the the Spartacist Uprising in 1919. Fellow travellers, they became friends and, the evidence suggests, lovers. Dodging bullets and interviewing colourful characters in war-torn Europe led these intrepid women, separately, to Bolshevik Russia, a country closed to outsiders since the October Revolution of 1917. Their fateful meeting had repercussions that spanned three decades, involving heads of state and politicians in Britain, the United States and Soviet Russia. The Lady is a Spy tells their forgotten story: that of two women who, far in advance of their time, worked as foreign correspondents, who operated as spies in dangerous shadowlands of international politics, and who were both imprisoned in Lubyanka, one of the most desperate places on earth. Their lives are reconstructed through numerous primary sources, not only the poems, diaries and letters of their friends and lovers, but also government documents (including newly declassified US State Department papers) that reveal the truth about their espionage careers and - in one case - evidence of a shocking betrayal.

Publisher: Ashgrove Publishing Ltd
ISBN: 9781853981913
Number of pages: 284
Dimensions: 210 x 145 mm

You may also be interested in...

The Abuse of Power
Added to basket
£25.00   £21.99
Hardback
A History of the Roman Empire in 21 Women
Added to basket
The Earl and the Pharaoh
Added to basket
Lily's Promise
Added to basket
£8.99
Paperback
Kings and Queens
Added to basket
£25.00   £21.99
Hardback
Johnson at 10
Added to basket
£25.00   £21.99
Hardback
SAS Brothers in Arms
Added to basket
£9.99   £8.49
Paperback
The Red Arrows
Added to basket
£10.99   £8.99
Paperback
Hitler, Stalin, Mum and Dad
Added to basket
£25.00   £20.99
Hardback
A Spy Among Friends
Added to basket
The Diary of a Young Girl
Added to basket
Coffee with Hitler
Added to basket
£10.99   £9.49
Paperback
Politics On the Edge
Added to basket
A Village in the Third Reich
Added to basket
The Spy and the Traitor
Added to basket
Hunting the Falcon
Added to basket
£30.00   £24.99
Hardback

Please sign in to write a review

Your review has been submitted successfully.

env: aptum
branch: