The book is a reprint of the first American edition originally published by Knopf in 2011. It offers readers a fresh opportunity to engage with its content, which may include compelling themes, intricate characters, or a captivating plot that resonates with contemporary issues. This reprint ensures accessibility for new audiences while preserving the original's essence and impact.
Ben Shephard Bücher
Ben Shephard war ein englischer Historiker, Autor und Fernsehproduzent. Er erhielt seine Ausbildung am Diocesan College in Kapstadt und an der Westminster School und schloss sein Geschichtsstudium an der Universität Oxford ab. Er produzierte zahlreiche historische Dokumentationen für die BBC und Channel 4, darunter "The World at War" und "The Nuclear Age".






After daybreak
- 176 Seiten
- 7 Lesestunden
Drawing on their diaries and letters, Ben Shephard reconstructs events at Belsen in the spring of 1945- from the first horror of its discovery, through the agonising process of trying to save the survivors, to the point where Belsen became 'more like a Butlin's Holiday camp than a concentration one'.
Headhunters
- 336 Seiten
- 12 Lesestunden
Their work ranged across fields that today carry a variety of labels - neurology, psychology, psychiatry, zoology - but which for these men formed part of the same enquiry: the search for a science of the mind. the big ideas that work - and the big ideas that turn out to be wrong.
I cannot imagine what has got into the central nervous system of the men.'A War of Nerves is a history of military psychiatry in the twentieth century - an authoritative, accessible account drawing on a vast range of diaries, interviews, medical papers and official records.
The Long Road Home
- 496 Seiten
- 18 Lesestunden
After the Great War, the millions killed on the battlefields were eclipsed by the millions more civilians carried off by disease and starvation when the conflict was over.
'This is a book about real people, real stories, real heroes. You might not know their faces, and you might not know their names - but once you've met them, you'll never forget them.'
Alianci, pomni milion�w ofiar głodu i chor�b po pierwszej wielkiej wojnie, na długo przed końcem II wojny światowej zaczęli przygotowywać plany dotyczące wieźniow oboz�w, pracownik�w przymusowych i jeńcow wojennych.Skala była niespotykana - w 1945 r. piętnaście milion�w ludzi rozsianych po całej Europie przebywało poza swoimi ojczystymi krajami. Wiekszość wr�ciła do siebie, ale ponad milion, gł�wnie Polak�w, Ukrainc�w, Litwin�w, Łotyszy, Estończykow, Jugosłowian, wracać nie mogło lub nie chciało.