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Along the Roads to Hell, by Michael Admiraal

Along the Roads to Hell, by Michael Admiraal

Along the Roads to Hell is a moving and haunting account.
Lily Lowe

In 2003, Michael Admiraal and his father embarked on a road trip across Europe to visit eight concentration camps. Along the Roads to Hell is the legacy of this trip; an account of their experience and memories infused with historical fact. Admiraal begins by...

Jane Thynne on The Judgement of Stars

Jane Thynne on The Judgement of Stars

Bestselling author Jane Thynne returns to talk about the newest book in the Clara Vine series.
Jane Thynne

Jane, It’s been a few years since the last Clara Vine novel was published. Can you tell is us about the character - and what inspired you to return to her story now in The Judgement of Stars? The original inspiration for Clara Vine came from several memoirs by women...

Hero City: Leningrad 1943-44, by Prit Buttar

Hero City: Leningrad 1943-44, by Prit Buttar

Hero City enhances Buttar's reputation as a detailed chronicler of the military campaigns in Eastern Europe in the Second World War.
Trevor James

This work by Prit Buttar enhances his reputation as a detailed chronicler of the military campaigns in Eastern Europe in the Second World War. His understanding of the nature of the campaigns waged by both sides during the second phase of the siege of Leningrad is...

Last Train to Freedom

Last Train to Freedom

From Kaunas to Kobe: The Epic Journey of WW2 Refugees via the Trans-Siberian Railway

In WW2 Europe, escape routes for Jewish refugees were vanishing one by one. When Germany invaded Poland in 1939, Kaunas in Lithuania became a haven for Jewish families fleeing the brutality of the Nazis. But that safety was short-lived.  As the numbers needing to flee...

It was the Mob that Did It: Louis Ferrante Interview

It was the Mob that Did It: Louis Ferrante Interview

Author Louis Ferrante returns for a chat about the next instalment of his history of the mafia, this time examining the relationship with the Kennedys, and the event that caused many to remember where they were when it happened.
Louis Ferrante

Readers may recall last year’s front page feature [Issue 20], an interview with Louis Ferrante, historian, former member of the Gambino crime family and author of Borgata Volume I: Rise of Empire, as he chronicled the mob not only as it grew in power in America, but...

The Siege: The Remarkable Story of the Greatest SAS Hostage Drama, by Ben Macintyre

The Siege: The Remarkable Story of the Greatest SAS Hostage Drama, by Ben Macintyre

Macintyre has an extraordinary ability to find new things in this well-known event.
Oliver Webb-Carter

At 19:07 on Monday 5th May 1980, the Metropolitan Police passed control of the Iranian Embassy siege to Lt. Col Mike Rose, commanding officer of the Special Air Service. Operation Nimrod was underway, as members of B Squadron abseiled, shot or blasted their way into...

Michael Admiraal on Along the Roads to Hell

Michael Admiraal on Along the Roads to Hell

The author of the new novel Along the Roads to Hell sits down with our editor to reflect on the memories and writing process behind his book.

Michael Admiraal

Michael, Along the Roads to Hell recounts the trip you took with your father to visit eight concentration camps across Europe. Why did you want to turn this experience into a book? In a way, the book could be seen as a monument for the special experience that I have...

Budapest in Wartime: Adam LeBor Interviewed

Budapest in Wartime: Adam LeBor Interviewed

In his latest book of non-fiction, journalist and author LeBor has written a tale of espionage and spycraft, and he met novelist Alan Bardos recently to discuss.

Budapest in Wartime: Adam LeBor Interviewed Congratulations on the publication of your new book, The Last Days of Budapest. It’s an extremely powerful book that tells the story of Budapest’s descent into catastrophe during World War II, could you start by telling us...

‘Educating the Natives’

‘Educating the Natives’

In his latest novel, the American writer and film director John Sayles examines the treatment of the Native Americans in the late 19th, and early 20th centuries, as young Indians were ‘civilised.’
John Sayles

‘Educating the Natives’ Like most Americans, my initial and only knowledge of the Carlisle Indian School was in relation to Jim Thorpe, the star football player and Olympic athlete who was a student there in the early 1900s. I did a report in class on a young-adult...

Forgotten History

Forgotten History

Michael Admiraal reflects on wartime atrocities and technological advancement during a visit to Peenemünde.
Michael Admiraal

When discussing concentration camp Dora-Mittelbau in my latest book Along the Roads to Hell, I mentioned the Heeresversuchsanstalt (HVA) Peenemünde. Peenemünde is situated on the north-west corner of the German island Usedom in the Baltic Sea, close to the Polish...