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Krystyna Skarbek: The Spy Who Talked Death into Surrendering.

by Wayne J. Gombar
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Current price ₹1,755.00
Original price ₹1,894.00
Original price ₹1,894.00
Original price ₹1,894.00
(-7%)
₹1,755.00
Current price ₹1,755.00

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Book cover type: Paperback
  • ISBN13: 9798250784085
  • Binding: Paperback
  • Subject: N/A
  • Publisher: Independently Published
  • Publisher Imprint: Independently Published
  • Publication Date:
  • Pages: 372
  • Original Price: GBP 14.97
  • Language: English
  • Edition: N/A
  • Item Weight: 645 grams
  • BISAC Subject(s): Europe / Great Britain / 20th Century

Courage without permission. Loyalty without borders. A legend reborn from silence.
August 1944: The Gestapo prison in Digne-les-Bains waited for dawn and execution. Three Allied agents knelt in their cells. No rescue force, no plan, no hope. Then a woman walked through the front doors of Nazi headquarters, unarmed, uninvited, unstoppable.
Her name was Krystyna Skarbek, known to British intelligence as Christine Granville. The first female agent of the Special Operations Executive (SOE), she bluffed the Gestapo into releasing prisoners, smuggled intelligence across Europe, and outwitted the Third Reich with nothing but language, nerve, and persuasion.
But her story did not end with victory. Postwar bureaucracy exiled her into invisibility; her courage was forgotten by the very nations she saved. Only decades later, as the SOE archives were declassified, did history rediscover the woman who redefined heroism itself.
This book, blending historical narrative, declassified intelligence records, and modern behavioral analysis, reconstructs the life of a spy who became both legend and lesson. Across thirty-three chapters and an epilogue of reflection, it traces her transformation from Polish aristocrat to British secret agent, from wartime savior to forgotten civilian, and finally to an icon reclaimed by scholars, soldiers, and feminists alike.
Drawing on intelligence theory, feminist historiography, and moral philosophy, Christine Granville: Courage Without Permission explores not only what she did, but how she thought, revealing a mind that weaponized empathy, fear, and persuasion decades before behavioral science had a name for them.
Christine's story speaks to the enduring paradox of courage: that true heroism often begins where permission ends. Her life, lived between nations and against norms, challenges every reader to ask what loyalty, conscience, and courage mean in their own time.
She needed no orders to act. She needed only conviction. Her nation was courage. Her passport was will. Her story was the blueprint of resistance itself.
About the Author
Wayne J. Gombar is a historian, intelligence analyst, and author of multiple works on espionage, ethics, and the philosophy of courage. His research blends declassified archival material, moral theory, and behavioral psychology to explore the architecture of heroism in the twentieth century.
With a background in intelligence studies, criminology, and ethics, Gombar's writing bridges the world of espionage and human conscience - portraying historical agents not merely as operatives, but as moral philosophers in motion.

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