Durante la segunda guerra mundial, Lisboa se convirtió en la última puerta de embarque hacia la libertad. Durante los años de la contienda pulularon por Lisboa agentes secretos de ambos bandos, embajadores del Eje y de los Aliados, aristócratas como los incómodos duques de Windsor, estrellas cinematográficas, tropas de paso y gente corriente, arruinada tras una peligrosa huida a través de la Francia ocupada y la España franquista. La ruta de Lisboa narra impresionantes historias en las que se mezclan el heroísmo y la mezquindad con el sufrimiento de cuantos vieron su vida destrozada por la guerra.
Boring. I was really interested in the topic, but couldn't get past 50 pages of this book. The scene and context were not set before the author started piling on details.
Interesting, but difficult read as the print is small, compact and there are few white spaces, and no pictures to spell off the reading. The history is not something I knew anything about so I persevered with my reading and gained some interesting facts about life beyond the killing in WWII.
Livro sobre a vida em Lisboa/Estoril no Portugal neutro da segunda grande guerra. Inclui alguns episódios interessantes passados na minha bela Lisboa dos anos 40 alguns dos quais já tinha conhecia através da minha avó que viveu em Lisboa durante o período da guerra. Infelizmente o livro foi escrito de uma forma bastante confusa e atabalhoada e só com bastante esforço cheguei a termina-lo..
Excessively, almost forensically detailed accounts of persons who passed through Lisbon on their journeys of escape from Nazi horrors in World War 2. As a documentary chronicle it works; as a readable narrative somewhat less so. Of value for its attention to minute details ( " I remember every detail. The Germans wore grey; you wore blue") and a super bibliography. Lisbon truly was a haven for those who suffered excruciating escape adventures of great danger. If only their letters of passage could have been so easily found in a piano.
Lisbon, Portugal, played a unique role in WWII history, serving as the escape hatch for tens of thousands of Jews and others threatened by the Nazi regime. Weber's book illuminates this unique moment in the city's history.
A quick and easy read? No way. The content was detailed and thoroughly documented. The chapter organization was chronological but each offered a unique perspective, demanding reader refocus. But it was worth the effort if genuinely interested in this topic. Diligence was rewarded.
While familiar with many aspects of WW2, my previous knowledge of Portugal lacked its complicated balancing act as a neutral nation with long positive ties with Britain, coupled with the increased wartime significance of its location.
Weber notes that Portugal’s position as host for spies, war correspondents, and refugees was significantly challenging. The dramatic accounts of efforts of governments, relief agencies, and individuals who engineered safe exit from war torn Europe alone may be worth the read. Elaboration on the activities of Vatican Frye in securing safe passage for countless individuals of Europe, including but clearly not limited to intellectuals, writers, and artists, is astounding.
The author notes this all unfolded while a strong autocratic leader is pushing back on communist inroads, which risked adding pressure on the Allies.
In short, a poor nation the size of Indiana with a high illiteracy rate played on oversized role in efforts to limit the human costs of war and shape the post war era.
This book was really well written, very factual. I am not much of a nonfiction reader so I lost interest with the book after a while, totally my own fault not the fault of the book....very interesting topic and much that I did not know about world war 2.