The Assassination of Reinhard Heydrich
By (Author) Callum MacDonald
Birlinn General
Birlinn Ltd
1st May 2007
24th April 2007
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Second World War
Modern warfare
Terrorism, armed struggle
War and defence operations
943.086092
Paperback
256
Width 130mm, Height 195mm, Spine 22mm
302g
SS-Obergruppenfhrer Reinhard Heydrich rose through the ranks from relative obscurity in the 1920s to the pinnacle of power in the Third Reich by 1936. He was considered the most dangerous man in Nazi Germany after Hitler himself. He was Himmler's deputy, yet even Himmler feared him. He operated in secret, quietly devoting his time to organising the Holocaust. On 27 May 1942 a Czech agent, part of a team of parachutists trained by SOE, threw a bomb at a passing Mercedes Heydrich was travelling in. Eight days later he died in agony from his wounds. The assassination sent a shock wave through the Nazi leadership and provoked ferocious reprisals against Czechs and Jews, the most notorious of which was the total obliteration of Lidice and the massacre of its inhabitants. Based on original archive material and interviews with surviving members of SOE and Czech military intelligence, this story of danger and tragedy is as exciting and strange as a spy thriller.
'Callum MacDonald has discovered much new material . . . and is an expert story-teller'
* Daily Telegraph *'A nail-bitingly suspenseful account'
* Publishers Weekly *Excellent
-- Robert Kee * Observer *Before his death in 1996, Callum MacDonald was an historian at the University of Warwick. His publications include The Lost Battle: Crete, 1941, The United States, Britain and Appeasement and Korea: The War Before Vietnam, as well as numerous articles on appeasement and the origins of the Second World War.