Bookbot

Patrick Seale

    Patrick Seale était un journaliste et auteur spécialisé sur le Moyen-Orient. Ancien correspondant pour The Observer, il a interviewé de nombreux dirigeants et personnalités du Moyen-Orient. Seale a également exercé les fonctions d'agent littéraire et de marchand d'art. Ses écrits offrent des perspectives éclairées sur le paysage politique et culturel complexe de la région.

    Philby: the Long Road to Moscow
    The Hilton Assignment
    French Revolution 1968
    Abu Nidal
    Asad
    • Asad

      • 552pages
      • 20 heures de lecture

      Explains the kaleidoscopic nature of Middle Eastern diplomacy.

      Asad
      4,1
    • Abu Nidal

      A Gun for Hire

      • 390pages
      • 14 heures de lecture

      Chronicles the inside story of the world's most ruthless terrorist and his international network, which includes links with Iraq, Libya, Syria, as well as with a number of European intelligence agencies. 75,000 first printing.

      Abu Nidal
      2,7
    • Hilton Assignment [Dec 31, 1973] Seale, Patrick and McConville, Maureen …

      The Hilton Assignment
    • Philby: the Long Road to Moscow

      • 372pages
      • 14 heures de lecture

      Kim Philby's theft of America's atomic secrets made his name synonymous with treason. It made monkeys out of his own people--twice. He penetrated the heart of England's secret service, lived a double life for three decades, and then escaped in the nick of time to comfortable retirement in Moscow--a favorite son who lived in a way calculated to destroy his family; a viper whose deadly cunning kept him in the trusting arms of his country. This book examines the political background of Philby's story, the moral dilemmas he faced, the whole milieu of espionage that blunts morality and restricts political choice. The authors suggest that Kim Philby was essentially an ordinary man caught up in an extraordinary situation; that once he embarked--with the most generous of motives--on a career as a Soviet spy, he found himself entrapped and finally destroyed by this twentieth-century paradox.

      Philby: the Long Road to Moscow