In late 1944, Winston Churchill receives information that the Nazis have secreted away billions through the Swiss Banking System and other places. He realizes that Great Britain will be bankrupt by the end of the war unless he does something about it. He orders Major Desmond Morton, the founder of Britain’s ultra-secret M Section to organize an expedition to attempt to extract a pair of leading Nazis, Joachim von Ribbentrop and Martin Bormann, from Hitler’s Berlin Führerbunker and bring them safely back to England. Bormann is the key person in Hitler’s hierarchy who holds the keys to Nazi fortunes. Morton forms such a unit and calls on Churchill’s longtime family friend Lieutenant Commander Ian Fleming, by then a praiseworthy intelligence officer for British Naval Intelligence, to head the mission. Fleming agrees and begins to set up the organization with Morton’s help and that of another Churchill protégée, Lt. Christopher Creighton, who was earlier in the war, a double spy for the British. Morton allows Fleming to name the mission and Fleming chooses Operation James Bond after his favorite bird book of the West Indies. Their plan involves sending a force of around 150 volunteers in kayaks to pluck the two Germans from under the noses of the Russians who are shelling the City of Berlin. Many of the volunteers are German Jews who have escaped their homeland and joined the German Freedom Fighters to oppose Hitler. After an arduous journey that cost the lives of a number of their volunteers, the group finally arrives and is able to extract Martin Bormann only days before Berlin falls to the Russians. After a daring escape through Berlin’s river system, Bormann is successfully whisked back to Great Britain where he hands over the secret account numbers and passwords to British authorities. He undergoes successful plastic surgery and remains in England until he makes his way to South America. The First James Bond is a true account of that mission and the people who pulled it off.
Jack DuArte is a native of New Orleans with a varied career in writing. DuArte attended Jesuit High School and worked for the Times-Picayune as a teenager. After attending the University of Kentucky and later graduating from the University of Evansville, DuArte served as an Air Force officer in Vietnam and received the Bronze Star for his efforts. He returned to New Orleans in 1971 and went into the wine business. He also authored a weekly column called Gastronomy for the Times-Picayune for a number of years and later hosted a radio talk show for WWL.
DuArte later enjoyed a full career in the wine business where he owned several Napa Valley wineries. DuArte always enjoyed a long time love affair for the thoroughbred horse industry and returned to Kentucky in 2001. He is an owner and breeder of thoroughbreds in Central Kentucky.
The White Mouse is DuArte’s fifth novel, and was his eighth published work. The White Mouse is part of DuArte’s World War II Series. Other WWII novels include The Resistance Singapore, Spitfire and MALTA. All are historical novels and predominantly based on fact.
DuArte read from his work at the International Book Project’s Passport to Literacy in Lexington, KY. He also participated in the several Kentucky Book Fairs in Frankfort and numerous other book fairs around the country.
DuArte and his wife Susan reside in Lexington, KY.