Baker Street Connection

A Double Agent in Baker Street SOE, London, 1943

Fiction & Literature, Historical
Cover of the book Baker Street Connection by Ian Trenowden, Mark Trenowden, BookBaby
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Ian Trenowden, Mark Trenowden ISBN: 9781626750562
Publisher: BookBaby Publication: February 20, 2013
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Ian Trenowden, Mark Trenowden
ISBN: 9781626750562
Publisher: BookBaby
Publication: February 20, 2013
Imprint:
Language: English
Professor M. R. D. Foot – SOE’s (Special Operations Executive) Official Historian - is adamant that no evidence that points to the existence of a German Connection, at Baker Street; French former agents of the Sicherheitsdienst (the intelligence agency of the SS), speaking literally in the shadow of the guillotine, denied that they had ever heard of such a thing. Never the less a high-ranking Gestapo official is on record as having said: ‘What a pity we haven’t got somebody at SOE’s London HQ. We must try to get somebody there.’ Whilst this story does not pretend to be other than fiction, it is an established fact that Squadron Leader Hugh Verity air-lifted Henri Dericourt (the real life ‘Gilbert’) from a field not far from Le Mans - the night before the date of Operation ‘Confiseur’. Although Dericourt returned to France, in May 1943, and found other fields for SOE - many not far south of the Loire - the Le Mans field was never used again throughout the war. This change of venue lends coincidental currency to the notion that the ‘Cygnet’ pick-up operation compromised the Le Mans field beyond further use . . . This story was researched and in written in the late seventies. Ian Trenowden died in September 2012 leaving behind an enormous amount of unpublished writing. ‘Baker Street Connection’ was a collection of typed pages and long hand notes secured in a binder. I think it is safe to say that Ian had an academic rather than a commercial brain. The story puts flesh on the bones of an interesting idea and includes a wealth of historical insight and detail. I am keen that Ian’s knowledge is kept alive and is passed on to others. The prose is a little dated, and there is the occasional ‘Crikey’, but I think it evokes the era and I could hear his voice on every page.
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Professor M. R. D. Foot – SOE’s (Special Operations Executive) Official Historian - is adamant that no evidence that points to the existence of a German Connection, at Baker Street; French former agents of the Sicherheitsdienst (the intelligence agency of the SS), speaking literally in the shadow of the guillotine, denied that they had ever heard of such a thing. Never the less a high-ranking Gestapo official is on record as having said: ‘What a pity we haven’t got somebody at SOE’s London HQ. We must try to get somebody there.’ Whilst this story does not pretend to be other than fiction, it is an established fact that Squadron Leader Hugh Verity air-lifted Henri Dericourt (the real life ‘Gilbert’) from a field not far from Le Mans - the night before the date of Operation ‘Confiseur’. Although Dericourt returned to France, in May 1943, and found other fields for SOE - many not far south of the Loire - the Le Mans field was never used again throughout the war. This change of venue lends coincidental currency to the notion that the ‘Cygnet’ pick-up operation compromised the Le Mans field beyond further use . . . This story was researched and in written in the late seventies. Ian Trenowden died in September 2012 leaving behind an enormous amount of unpublished writing. ‘Baker Street Connection’ was a collection of typed pages and long hand notes secured in a binder. I think it is safe to say that Ian had an academic rather than a commercial brain. The story puts flesh on the bones of an interesting idea and includes a wealth of historical insight and detail. I am keen that Ian’s knowledge is kept alive and is passed on to others. The prose is a little dated, and there is the occasional ‘Crikey’, but I think it evokes the era and I could hear his voice on every page.

More books from BookBaby

Cover of the book The Last Journey - Going Home - Expanded Edition by Ian Trenowden, Mark Trenowden
Cover of the book Thraxas at the Races by Ian Trenowden, Mark Trenowden
Cover of the book Washington DeCoded by Ian Trenowden, Mark Trenowden
Cover of the book QAR for the Early Primary Grades by Ian Trenowden, Mark Trenowden
Cover of the book Road to Recovery by Ian Trenowden, Mark Trenowden
Cover of the book The Magic of The Magdalene Key by Ian Trenowden, Mark Trenowden
Cover of the book A Taste of Honey by Ian Trenowden, Mark Trenowden
Cover of the book Sherlock Holmes on the Wild Frontier by Ian Trenowden, Mark Trenowden
Cover of the book I Hate Practice by Ian Trenowden, Mark Trenowden
Cover of the book Blues Piano For Beginners by Ian Trenowden, Mark Trenowden
Cover of the book The Egypt Tomb Machine by Ian Trenowden, Mark Trenowden
Cover of the book From Pain to Peace With Endo by Ian Trenowden, Mark Trenowden
Cover of the book GODBOOK by Ian Trenowden, Mark Trenowden
Cover of the book The Shaman's Cross by Ian Trenowden, Mark Trenowden
Cover of the book THE WORDS OF CHRIST By St JOHN by Ian Trenowden, Mark Trenowden
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy