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Book review: 'Double Cross' is an uneven look at WWII espionage
www.deseretnews.com
[Deseret News] - Perhaps the most fascinating of the spies, however, is “Agent Garbo,” the Spaniard Juan Pujol, whose desire to work for the British leads to incredible risks and ever greater rewards for the allied cause. The book's subtitle is a bit misleading as the
'Agent Garbo,' The Spy Who Lied About D-Day
www.northcountrypublicradio.org
[North Country Public Radio] - Juan Pujol Garcia lived a lie that helped win World War II. He was a double agent for the British, performing so well that they nicknamed him for the enigmatic actress Greta Garbo. Author Stephan Talty tells the story of this unlikely hero in a new
Required reading
nypost.com
[New York Post] - The Allied forces owe their D-Day victory in World War II to bravery, skill — and a Spanish double-agent chicken farmer named Juan Pujol. According to best-selling author Talty, the Barcelona spy code-named Agent Garbo misled the Nazis into thinking
Book Reviews: 'Jack 1939,' 'Agent Garbo,' and 'Postcards From the New Yorker'
www.nydailynews.com
[New York Daily News] - “Agent Garbo: The Brilliant, Eccentric Secret Agent Who Tricked Hitler & Saved D-Day” by Stephan Talty Juan Pujol was in Barcelona after the Spanish Civil War when he re-created himself as a spy. In 1940, with a growing hatred for the Nazis, he took
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