Prix bas
CHF23.90
Habituellement expédié sous 2 à 4 semaines.
Am Ende des Zweiten Weltkriegs entkamen einige hochrangige Nazis der Justiz. Die Namen mancher sind tief in die Geschichte des 20. Jahrhunderts eingraviert: Eichmann, Mengele, Martin Bormann, Klaus Barbie - nicht nur aufgrund der Monstrosität ihrer Taten, sondern auch weil sie erfolgreich nach Südamerika flüchten konnten. Ihre Flucht war packend wie ein Thriller: Von korrupten katholischen Priestern des Vatikans unterstützt, wurden sie über die so genannten 'Rattenlinien' nach Österreich geschmuggelt, wo sie von argentinischen Geheimdienstlern in Empfang genommen wurden. Nicht weniger dramatisch waren die Versuche rachedurstiger Holocaust-Überlebenden und unfähiger Politiker, sie der Gerichtsbarkeit zuzuführen ... Ein historisches Non-Fiction-Werk mit dem Tempo eines Thrillers.
Informationen zum Autor Guy Walters is the author of six books on the Second World War, including Berlin Games . A former journalist on The Times he writes widely on historical topics for the national press. He lives in Wiltshire with his wife the author Annabel Venning and their two children. Klappentext At the end of the Second World War, some of the highest members of the Nazi party escaped justice; seventy years later, and many still haven't been punished for their crimes. Their nature of escape is as gripping as any thriller - aided by corrupt priests, travelling through underground passages, hiding in foreboding castles - and the attempts of some to bring them to justice are equally as thrilling. Walters looks at the entire story of both the hunters and the hunted. Zusammenfassung At the end of the Second World War some of the highest ranking members of the Nazi party escaped from justice. Guy Walters has travelled the world in pursuit of the real account of how the Nazis escaped at the end of the war, the attempts, sometimes successful, to bring them to justice, and what really happened to those that got away.
Auteur
Guy Walters is the author of six books on the Second World War, including Berlin Games. A former journalist on The Times he writes widely on historical topics for the national press. He lives in Wiltshire with his wife the author Annabel Venning and their two children.
Texte du rabat
At the end of the Second World War, some of the highest members of the Nazi party escaped justice; seventy years later, and many still haven't been punished for their crimes. Their nature of escape is as gripping as any thriller - aided by corrupt priests, travelling through underground passages, hiding in foreboding castles - and the attempts of some to bring them to justice are equally as thrilling. Walters looks at the entire story of both the hunters and the hunted.
Résumé
At the end of the Second World War some of the highest ranking members of the Nazi party escaped from justice. Guy Walters has travelled the world in pursuit of the real account of how the Nazis escaped at the end of the war, the attempts, sometimes successful, to bring them to justice, and what really happened to those that got away.