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Giles Milton

    15 janvier 1966

    Giles Milton est un écrivain et journaliste britannique spécialisé dans l'histoire des voyages et de l'exploration. Son œuvre redonne vie aux histoires les plus fascinantes – et souvent négligées – de l'histoire, animée par sa connaissance approfondie et sa curiosité insatiable. Milton est constamment à la recherche de récits inédits, que ce soit chez lui ou en voyage, les apportant aux lecteurs avec un style narratif captivant. Ses recherches l'ont mené aux quatre coins du monde, recueillant du matériel pour ses récits historiques percutants.

    Giles Milton
    White Gold
    Paradise Lost
    Call Me Gorgeous!
    Churchill's Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare
    Checkmate in Berlin
    D-Day. Les soldats du débarquement
    • D-Day. Les soldats du débarquement

      • 560pages
      • 20 heures de lecture

      Soixante-quinze ans ont passé depuis le débarquement de Normandie, la plus grande offensive par la mer de l’histoire de l’humanité. Ce jour-là, le 6 juin 1944, l’issue de la guerre s’est trouvée suspendue à un fil, car le succès ou l’échec de l’opération colossale du Débarquement ouvrirait la voie, ou non, à une victoire alliée. C’est l’histoire des soldats que raconte ici Giles Milton, ces hommes souvent très jeunes qui ont combattu jusqu’à la mort pour mettre fin à la Seconde Guerre mondiale. Pour évoquer le jour J, Milton rapporte les récits des survivants : le jeune conscrit allié, le défenseur d’élite allemand, le résistant français, les civils de Normandie. Depuis les stratèges des forces alliées jusqu’aux soldats de la Wehrmacht dans les bunkers du littoral, D-Day : les soldats du Débarquement décrit avec force la terreur absolue de ceux qui étaient pris au piège de la ligne de front de l’opération Overlord. Milton donne la parole aux personnes que l’on n’avait jamais entendues : la fille du boucher du village, la femme du commandant de panzer, le chauffeur du général – tous les protagonistes de cette bataille monstrueuse trouvent ici leur voix. Un ouvrage magistral. « Un récit exemplaire, animé par le sentiment d’une humanité commune subtilement exprimée par l’auteur. » Trevor Royle, The Herald « Incroyablement authentique, révélateur et magnifiquement écrit. Un tour de force captivant. » Damien Lewis Né en 1966, Giles Milton est spécialiste de l’histoire des voyages et des explorations. Il a publié plusieurs ouvrages de non-fiction, dont huit traduits en français aux Éditions Noir sur Blanc : La Guerre de la noix muscade (2000), Les Aventuriers de la Reine (2002), Samouraï William (2003), Captifs en Barbarie (2006), Le Paradis perdu (2010), Wolfram, un jeune rêveur face aux nazis (2012), Roulette russe (2015) et Les Saboteurs de l’ombre (2018). Trois romans ont été traduits chez Buchet/Chastel, Le Nez d’Edward Trencom (2007), Le Monde selon Arnold (2010) et Le cadavre était presque parfait (2016), ainsi qu’un recueil d’histoires inattendues, Les Miscellanées (Libretto, 2016). Giles Milton a également écrit trois livres pour enfants, dont deux illustrés par sa femme Alexandra. Il vit à Londres.

      D-Day. Les soldats du débarquement
    • The end of World War Two saw an intense and deeply personal struggle for mastery of the Western world amidst the ruins of Berlin. In this thrilling account, bestselling historian Giles Milton recounts epic four-year drama that would culminate in The Berlin Airlift. It is the story of the ultimate game of roulette amongst the enigmatic larger-than-life personalities from rival powers: Britain, the United States, France and the Soviet Union. Drawing on previously unknown oral and written testimonies, Checkmate in Berlin tells - as never before - a story of flawed individuals each determined to win and the first battle of the Cold War.

      Checkmate in Berlin
    • Call Me Gorgeous! is a fun, stylish book about a very, very strange creature. It has a porcupine's spines and a crocodile's teeth, a chameleon's tail and a cockerel's feet. What on earth could it be? Uncover this mysterious and fabulous beastthrough Alexandra Milton's stunning collage.

      Call Me Gorgeous!
    • Paradise Lost

      • 448pages
      • 16 heures de lecture
      4,2(78)Évaluer

      A powerful tale of destruction, heroism and survival. Tells the largely untold story of the most dramatic and horrific events of the 20th century, the Burning of Smyrna.

      Paradise Lost
    • Big Chief Elizabeth

      How England's Adventurers Gambled and Won the New World

      4,0(94)Évaluer

      In 1586, Queen Elizabeth I was enthralled by captive American Indian Manteo. Manteo was returned to his homeland as Governor, a gamble that resulted in the first English settlement in the New World. Using first-hand accounts, this book tells a story that was to have an extraordinary twist.

      Big Chief Elizabeth
    • Nathaniel's Nutmeg

      • 400pages
      • 14 heures de lecture
      3,9(4032)Évaluer

      The extraordinary adventure-filled story of how England came to own Manhattan in the seventeenth century

      Nathaniel's Nutmeg
    • Samurai William

      The Adventurer Who Unlocked Japan

      • 416pages
      • 15 heures de lecture
      3,8(146)Évaluer

      On an ordinary winter's day in London, 1611, a mysterious letter arrived at the offices of the East India Trading Company. It had taken some seven years for the letter to make its tortuous way to England and the merchants there were astounded by its contents... William Adams, an Englishman, had been one of only twenty-four survivors of a fleet of ships bound for Asia, and he had washed up in the forbidden land of Japan. The traders in London were even more astonished to learn that, rather than be horrified by the strange customs, Adams had fallen in love with the barbaric splendour of the country - and had decided to settle. He had forged a close friendship with the ruthless Shogun Ieyasu, taken a Japanese wife and sired a new, mixed-blood family. Adams' letter was the spark that fired up the merchants in London to plan a new expedition to the Far East, with designs to trade with the Japanese and use Adams' contacts there to forge new commercial links. SAMURAI WILLIAM illuminates a world whose horizons were rapidly expanding - eastwards.

      Samurai William
    • Set in 1917, amid the chaos of the post-Russian Revolution, a unique group of British spies is secretly sent into Soviet Russia to disrupt Lenin's ambitious plot to undermine British rule in India and destabilize Western democracies. Led by the eccentric Mansfield Cumming, a monocled, one-legged sea captain with a flair for secret inks and explosives, these self-taught agents were the precursors to modern MI6. Their mission was perilous: to thwart a dangerous alliance between Soviet revolutionaries and Islamic jihadis, which posed a significant threat to the West. Operating under the loose directive of "Just don't get yourself killed," the spies engaged in a series of high-stakes operations involving murder, deception, and disguise. They infiltrated key Soviet institutions, including the Red Army and the secret police, and came alarmingly close to assassinating Lenin. Their efforts culminated in Tashkent, where they successfully unraveled Lenin's global revolutionary plans. This remarkable tale showcases how these spies reshaped intelligence work, relying on espionage and cunning rather than conventional warfare, laying the groundwork for contemporary secret services and inspiring fictional characters like James Bond and Jason Bourne. The narrative draws on recently declassified records from India Political Intelligence, offering a fresh perspective on this covert operation.

      Russian roulette : a deadly game : how British spies thwarted Lenin's global plot