The Great Escape, Kati Marton
The Great Escape, Kati Marton
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The Great Escape
Nine Jews Who Fled Hitler and Changed the World

Author: Kati Marton

Narrator: Anna Fields

Unabridged: 9 hr 23 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 11/01/2006


Synopsis

The stunning story of the breathtaking journey of nine extraordinary men from Budapest to the New World, what they experienced along their dangerous route, and how they changed America and the world.

In a style both personal and historically groundbreaking, acclaimed author Kati Marton (herself born in Budapest) tells the tale of their youth in Budapest's Golden Age of the early twentieth century, their flight, and their lives of extraordinary accomplishment, danger, glamour, and poignancy.

Marton follows these nine over the decades as they flee fascism and anti-Semitism, seek sanctuary in America and England, and set out to make their mark. The scientists Leo Szilard, Edward Teller, and Eugene Wigner enlist Albert Einstein to get Franklin Roosevelt to initiate the development of the atomic bomb. Along with John von Neuman, who pioneers the computer, they succeed in achieving that goal before Nazi Germany, ending the Second World War, and opening a new age.

Arthur Koestler writes the most important anti-Communist novel of the century, Darkness at Noon. Robert Capa is the first photographer ashore on D-Day. He virtually invents photojournalism and gives us some of the century's most enduring records of modern warfare.

Andre Kertesz pioneers modern photojournalism, and Alexander Korda, who makes propaganda films for Churchill, leaves the stark portrait of a post war Europe with The Third Man, as his fellow filmmaker, Michael Curtiz, leaves us the immortal Casablanca, a call to arms and the most famous romantic film of all time.

Marton brings passion and breadth to these dramatic lives as they help invent the twentieth century.


About Kati Marton

Kati Marton is an award-winning former NPR and ABC News correspondent. The recipient of a George Foster Peabody Award for broadcast journalism, she is the author of Hidden Power: Presidential Marriages That Shaped Our History, a New York Times bestseller; Wallenberg; The Polk Conspiracy; A Death in Jerusalem; and the novel An American Woman. Marton lives in New York with her husband, Richard Holbrooke.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Marcia

I loved the history in this book. It brought together the movie industry, the Manhattan Project and photography. There were so many famous names that influenced America. A most impressive work! Read this book as well as The Invisible Bridge......more

Just finished "Enemies of the People" not dreaming that this could be as good, if not better. But it is. Marton is a terrific writer.......more

Goodreads review by Michael

A mildly interesting book about some very gifted men who had two things in common: 1) growing up in Hungary and 2) leaving for England or the UK before World War II. I note that despite the subtitle, not all of them "fled Hitler." All left Hungary some years before World War II, and not all left Eur......more