Operation Mincemeat: How a Dead Man and a Bizarre Plan Fooled the Nazis and Assured an Allied Victor
Operation Mincemeat: How a Dead Man and a Bizarre Plan Fooled the Nazis and Assured an Allied Victor book cover

Operation Mincemeat: How a Dead Man and a Bizarre Plan Fooled the Nazis and Assured an Allied Victor

Paperback – January 1, 2011

Price
$18.00
Format
Paperback
Pages
432
Publisher
Crown
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0307453280
Dimensions
5.16 x 0.98 x 7.97 inches
Weight
11.5 ounces

Description

"Here, finally, is the complete story with its full cast of characters (not a dull one among them), pure cathnip to fans of World War II thrillers and a lot of fun for everyone else." — Joseph Kanon, Washington Post Book World "Brilliant and almost absurdly entertaining…The cast of characters involved in Mincemeat, as the caper was called, was extraordinary, and Macintyre tells their stories with gusto." — Malcolm Gladwell, The New Yorker "OPERATION MINCEMEAT is utterly, to employ a dead word, thrilling. But to call it thus is to miss the point slightly in terms of admiring it properly….What makes OPERATION MINCEMEAT so winning, in addition to Mr. Macintyre’s meticulous research and the layers of his historical understanding, is his elegant, jaunty, and very British high style." — Dwight Garner, New York Times "Macintyre, whose previous book chronicled the incredible exploits of Eddie Chapman, the crook turned spy known as Zigzag, excels at this sort of twisted narrative….Great fun." — Jennet Conant, New York Times Book Review "A nearly flawless true-life picaresque…zeroes in on one of the few times in war history when excessive literary imagination, instead of hobbling a clandestine enterprise, worked beyond its authors’ wildest dream….Almost inedibly rich with literary truffles—doppelgangers, obsession, transgression, self-fashioning….It is hard to oversate how cinematic this story really was." — New Republic "Another true WWII tale that reads like something by Ian Fleming….the fullest account yet." — Entertainment Weekly "London Times writer-at-large Macintyre offers a solid and entertaining updating of WWII's best-known 'human intelligence' operation....[and] recounts [the] adventures and misadventures with panache." —Publishers Weekly "[An] edge-of-your-seat history....unveiling previously classified files and even unearthing living witnesses to the grand conspiracy." — Kirkus Reviews "This retelling of a well-known part of World War II espionage history will appeal to military history buffs, especially those new to this particular episode, and to readers of adventure fiction, who will find it hard to put down." — Library Journal "A terrific book….Students of the second world war have been familiar with Mincemeat for many years, but Macintyre offers a mass of new detail, and enchanting pen portraits of the British, Spanish and German participants. His book is a rollicking read for all those who enjoy a spy story so fanciful that Ian Fleming—himself an officer in Montagu’s wartime department—would never have dared to invent it." — Max Hastings, The Sunday Times [London] "A chillingly good book….Macintyre has taken a well-known story of wartime deception, embellished it, and shown that it was even more ingenious and even more risky than we had all supposed." —The Spectator "Fascinating ... The complexities and consequences of the story that Macintyre tells in OPERATION MINCEMEAT are compelling – a tribute to his impressive abilities as a sleuth (ones that we’ve witnessed in his previous books) and to his capacities as a writer." — William Boyd, The Times [London] Ben Macintyre is a writer-at-large for The Times (U.K.) and the bestselling author of The Spy and the Traitor, A Spy Among Friends, Double Cross, Agent Zigzag, and Rogue Heroes , among other books. Macintyre has also written and presented BBC documentaries of his work. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter OneThe Sardine SpotterJosé Antonio Rey María had no intention of making history when he rowed out into the Atlantic from the coast of Andalusia in southwest Spain on April 30, 1943. He was merely looking for sardines.José was proud of his reputation as the best fish spotter in Punta Umbria. On a clear day, he could pick out the telltale iridescent flash of sardines several fathoms deep. When he saw a shoal, José would mark the place with a buoy and then signal to Pepe Cordero and the other fishermen in the larger boat, La Calina, to row over swiftly with the horseshoe net.But the weather today was bad for fish spotting. The sky was overcast, and an onshore wind ruffled the water's surface. The fishermen of Punta Umbria had set out before dawn, but so far they had caught only anchovies and a few bream. Rowing Ana, his little skiff, in a wide arc, José scanned the water again, the rising sun warming his back. On the shore, he could see the little cluster of fishing huts beneath the dunes on Playa del Portil, his home. Beyond that, past the estuary where the rivers Odiel and Tinto flowed into the sea, lay the port of Huelva.The war, now in its fourth year, had hardly touched this part of Spain. Sometimes José would come across strange flotsam in the water- fragments of charred wood, pools of oil, and other debris that told of battles somewhere out at sea. Earlier that morning, he had heard gunfire in the distance, and a loud explosion. Pepe said that the war was ruining the fishing business, as no one had any money, and he might have to sell La Calina and Ana. It was rumoured that the captains of some of the larger fishing boats spied for the Germans or the British. But in most ways the hard lives of the fishermen continued as they had always done.José had been born on the beach, in a hut made from driftwood, twenty- three years earlier. He had never traveled beyond Huelva. He had never been to school or learned to read and write. But no one in Punta Umbria was better at spotting fish.It was midmorning when José noticed a "lump" above the surface of the water. At first he thought it must be a dead porpoise, but as he rowed closer the shape grew clearer, and then unmistakable. It was a body, floating, facedown, buoyed by a yellow life jacket, the lower part of the torso invisible. The figure seemed to be dressed in uniform.As he reached over the gunwale to grab the body, José caught a gust of putrefaction and found himself looking into the face of a man, or, rather, what had been the face of a man. The chin was entirely covered in green mold, while the upper part of the face was dark, as if tanned by the sun. José wondered if the dead man had been burned in some accident at sea. The skin on the nose and chin had begun to rot away.José waved and shouted to the other fishermen. As La Calina drew alongside, Pepe and the crew clustered to the gunwale. José called for them to throw down a rope and haul the body aboard, but "no-one wanted to touch it." Annoyed, José realized he would have to bring it ashore himself. Seizing a handful of sodden uniform, he hauled the corpse onto the stern, and with the legs still trailing in the water, he rowed back to shore, trying not to breathe in the smell.On the part of the beach called La Bota-the boot-José and Pepe dragged the body up to the dunes. A black briefcase, attached to the man by a chain, trailed in the sand behind them. They laid out the corpse in the shade of a pine tree. Children streamed out of the huts and gathered around the gruesome spectacle. The man was tall, at least six feet, dressed in a khaki tunic and trench coat, with large army boots. Seventeen-year-old Obdulia Serrano spotted a small silver chain with a cross around his neck. The dead man must have been a Roman Catholic.Obdulia was sent to summon the officer from the defense unit guarding this part of the coast. A dozen men of Spain's Seventy-second Infantry Regiment had been marching up and down the beach earlier that morning, as they did, rather pointlessly, most mornings, and the soldiers were now taking a siesta under the trees. The officer ordered two of his men to stand guard over the body, in case someone tried to go through the dead man's pockets, and trudged off up the beach to find his commanding officer.The scent of the wild rosemary and jacaranda growing in the dunes could not mask the stench of decomposition. Flies buzzed around the body. The soldiers moved upwind. Somebody went to fetch a donkey to carry the body to the village of Punta Umbria four miles away. From there, it could be taken by boat across the estuary to Huelva. The children dispersed.José Antonio Rey María, perfectly unaware of the events he had just set in motion, pushed his little boat back into the sea and resumed his search for sardines.Two months earlier, in a tiny, tobacco-stained basement room beneath the Admiralty building in Whitehall, two men had sat puzzling over a conundrum of their own devising: how to create a person from nothing, a man who had never been. The younger man was tall and thin, with thick spectacles and an elaborate air-force mustache, which he twiddled in rapt concentration. The other, elegant and languid, was dressed in naval uniform and sucked on a curved pipe that fizzed and crackled evilly. The stuffy underground cavern lacked windows, natural light, and ventilation. The walls were covered in large maps and the ceiling stained a greasy nicotine yellow. It had once been a wine cellar. Now it was home to a section of the British Secret Service made up of four intelligence officers, seven secretaries and typists, six typewriters, a bank of locked filing cabinets, a dozen ashtrays, and two scrambler telephones. Section 17M was so secret that barely twenty people outside the room even knew of its existence.Room 13 of the Admiralty was a clearinghouse of secrets, lies, and whispers. Every day the most lethal and valuable intelligence-decoded messages, deception plans, enemy troop movements, coded spy reports, and other mysteries-poured into this little basement room, where they were analyzed, assessed, and dispatched to distant parts of the world, the armor and ammunition of a secret war.The two officers-Pipe and Mustache-were also responsible for running agents and double agents, espionage and counterespionage, intelligence, fakery, and fraud: they passed lies to the enemy that were false and damaging, as well as information that was true but harmless; they ran willing spies, reluctant spies pressed into service, and spies who did not exist at all. Now, with the war at its height, they set about creating a spy who was different from all the others and all that had come before: a secret agent who was not only fictional but dead.The defining feature of this spy would be his falsity. He was a pure figment of imagination, a weapon in a war far removed from the traditional battle of bombs and bullets. At its most visible, war is fought with leadership, courage, tactics, and brute force; this is the conventional war of attack and counterattack, lines on a map, numbers and luck. This war is usually painted in black, white, and blood red, with winners, losers, and casualties: the good, the bad, and the dead. Alongside that conflict is another, less visible species of war, played out in shades of gray, a battle of deception, seduction, and bad faith, of tricks and mirrors, in which the truth is protected, as Churchill put it, by a "bodyguard of lies." The combatants in this war of the imagination were seldom what they seemed to be, for the covert world, in which fiction and reality are sometimes enemies and sometimes allies, attracts minds that are subtle, supple, and often extremely strange.The man lying in the dunes at Punta Umbria was a fraud. The lies he carried would fly from London to Madrid to Berlin, traveling from a freezing Scottish loch to the shores of Sicily, from fiction to reality, and from Room 13 of the Admiralty all the way to Hitler's desk. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • NEW YORK TIMES
  • BESTSELLER • NOW A NETFLIX FILM STARRING COLIN FIRTH • The “brilliant and almost absurdly entertaining” (Malcolm Gladwell,
  • The New Yorker
  • ) true story of the most successful—and certainly the strangest—deception carried out in World War II, from the acclaimed author of
  • The Spy and the Traitor
  • “Pure catnip to fans of World War II thrillers and a lot of fun for everyone else.”—Joseph Kanon,
  • The Washington Post Book World
  • Near the end of World War II, two British naval officers came up with a brilliant and slightly mad scheme to mislead the Nazi armies about where the Allies would attack southern Europe. To carry out the plan, they would have to rely on the most unlikely of secret agents: a dead man.Ben Macintyre’s dazzling, critically acclaimed bestseller chronicles the extraordinary story of what happened after British officials planted this dead body—outfitted in a British military uniform with a briefcase containing false intelligence documents—in Nazi territory, and how this secret mission fooled Hitler into changing military positioning, paving the way for the Allies’ drive to victory.
  • NAMED ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR BY
  • THE NEW YORK TIMES

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(1.7K)
★★★★
25%
(1.5K)
★★★
15%
(872)
★★
7%
(407)
23%
(1.3K)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

Too much filler

The author has taken a story line that could have made an interesting 150 page book and added filler to increase the length to 350 pages. Biographies and the details for minor characters in the plot abound. I also get the sense that the significance of this one incident to the winning of World War II has been way overblown. If you read this book, I suspect you will end up skipping over large chunks of the text.
5 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Difficult to read. You need a scorecard.

This was a good book, but it was also a hard read. You are deluged with names, and you'd better keep track of who's who...all the way through....so this is something you might want to consider a "study" instead of reading for an afternoon on the chaise lounge with bon-bons. This is a book for the serious reader for educational purposes.
2 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Great Stuff!!

A marvellous story of intrigue of actual events during World War II. There are a host of wonderful and eclectic characters in England, Spain and Germany. The author presents all these in readable detail.

The sequence of events - and there are several - are well depicted and we are clearly presented with the logical construction of this set-up meant to deceive the Germans into believing that the Allies mean to launch a multi-pronged invasion in the Mediterranean - instead of just Sicily.

The author is careful to show all the nuances of the deception - how much embellishment do you do to preserve the initial lie? The author is also forthright to point out that "Mincemeat" was part of an overall package. The Germans in Spain pushed their find over-enthusiastically and many used it to reinforce their own preconceptions of an Allied invasion of Greece. As Mr. Macintyre demonstrates, if German Intelligence would have probed more in any direction (such as the ambiguous autopsy from the Spanish coroner) the ruse would have been exposed. Instead the clientele was an over-eager buyer.

It is with sadness at the end of the book when we are shown the tombstone of this "unknown civilian" - whose body was used in after-life to conjure this grand deception.

The paperback edition has some useful footnotes.

This is just a really fabulous spy story with all the different layers exposed for us to marvel at.
2 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Well-written and Substantial

I very much enjoyed 'Operation Mincemeat.'

The book is, first, well-written for nonfiction, with a clear, logical format that is easy to read (and has a minimum of "coloring" by the author). Second, the book is rich in substance, containing several layers and nuances. In this respect, I found 'Mincemeat' to be engaging and pleasing from the outset, in regards to its comprehensive and well-researched account of the Operation and the lives of its key players, plus its general overview of WWII-era espionage and warfare. However, what I found most interesting was in a second, deeper dimension within the book, written between its lines: that of the power of imagination, and the practical, real-world applications it possesses, even in the depths of a world war. Namely, the book demonstrates, through English intelligence's construction of the "soldier who never was," just how necessary imagination is for such endeavors; and, in turn, we are granted insight into even more, tangential studies, including forays into the psychological and the historical, and the strangeness of actual reality, in "truth is stranger than fiction"-type fashion. On this last point, 'Mincemeat' forces us to confront the vast sea of possibility in which we exist daily, by showing us a world where a dead soldier is not only fictionalized into another man for a bold act of deception, but a world in which the operation actually seemed to work! Much can be said on these subjects, and much can be learned from the book at large. Truly, a literary feast.

My thanks goes out to this book's author, subjects, and publisher. I am grateful for, and have benefited from, your work and service.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

an enjoyable retelling and investigation of a famous Allied deception

Operation Mincement is an enjoyable retelling and further investigation of the Allied deception, using a dead body, to plant doubts about the 1943 invasion of Sicily towards the Axis command. This is not an unknown story, of course. There was the early 50's novel, which forced the agent in charge of Mincement, Montagu, to write his own redacted history of the event, leading to a dramatized Hollywood movie in the mid 1950's. What sets Macintyre's account as new, is that he has been able to draw on released wartime archives, discovered Montagu papers, and a better fleshing out of the situation in Spain and back up-ed speculation on the thinking of the German intelligence command.

Ewan Montagu's history of the event from the 50's, is of course limited, due to secrecy concerns, and the inability to research and detail German and Spanish sources. The basic story remains the same. Allied intelligence was determined to undermine the linear assumptions of German military planning by throwing at them 'corkscrews'. In this case, taking the body of a Welsh man with a tragic life, and developing a back story to back up the main deception, that the allies intended to invade Greece and Sardinia and not Sicily. Because the Axis bought this story, at the very worst, this deception saved the lives of many Allied serviceman and Italian civilians. It also probably hastened the end of the Mussolini regime.

Macintyre does bring a journalist's eye for investigation and a real inquisitive mind. Not only did he have access to the Montagu papers, found in a wooden box, but he was able to interview the last surviving members of all those involved, offering the last attempt at chronicling their thoughts and observations to build the greater story. Far from merely retelling British intelligence efforts, Macintyre places Mincemeat within the larger context of the war and its reaction in German intelligence and the subterfuge ongoing in Franco's Spain. For popular history, he has done a fine job of fleshing out a known event with new information and within its context. As a story of intelligence and its roll in World War II, this is highly recommended.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Five Stars

An intriguing story very well told.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Excellent spy book

Having read the book and watched the movie "The Man Who Never Was", I was ready to learn more of the story. This book is excellent for the fact that the author had access to all the declassified secrets on the British and German side of the story,
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Great Story

Great story. Very well written. Reads better than many novels, but is a true story. Really enjoyed the elaborate planning and different levels of deception needed to pull off this ruse. The people involved were extremely clever, allowing human nature to do much of the work. Able to read in a weekend. Very highly recommended.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

A Satisfying Tale of Espionage

I have read a lot of books concerning WWII, but haven't really read anything relating to espionage efforts during the war. Ben Macintyre has woven a fascinating tale of an intricate plan to fool Nazi Germany. "Operation Mincemeat: How a Dead Man and a Bizarre Plan Fooled the Nazis and Assured an Allied Victory" is a riveting read about an ingenious plan and a unique testament to the power of persuasion and pride.

Operation Mincemeat was the code name for a plan to use a dead body disguised as a soldier with "secret" papers in an attached briefcase. The body was to wash ashore on the coast of neutral Spain with the hope that local German spies would get access to these secret papers, believe what was written in them, and lessen their forces on the island of Sicily, so that the Allied forces could attack them virtually unaware. So much could have gone wrong and almost did. This ingenious plan was designed by Ewen Montagu and Charles Cholmondeley (receiving due recognition for the first time). They designed the entire plan down to the minutest detail - recovering a body from the morgue (albeit illegally), creating a personality for this "soldier" which included love notes from an imaginary fiancé and theatre tickets, and drafting the secret letters that would convince German leaders that the Allied forces would not try to land at Sicily, the most obvious point of entry. Montagu and Cholmondeley get swept up with their plans, becoming so obsessed (at least Montagu) that it becomes hard to let their creation, William Martin, go.

For their plan to succeed, a lot had to happen. Spanish officials needed to perform a minimum autopsy so that German spies wouldn't know the man had been dead far longer than he was meant to appear; British intelligence had to hope that the Germans got a look at the documents but believed that the British were unaware of their gained knowledge; and a German spy desperate to redeem himself had to convince his superiors that the plan was genuine. Operation Mincemeat was a huge risk, one that paid off in the end, perhaps just by sheer luck.

Ben Macintyre does an incredible job of pacing and weaving together a wide array of characters and knowledge. The title operation was part of a larger operation known as Operation Husky, and the author weaves together short biographies of almost every key player in the book - from German spies to submarine commanders to Spanish double agents to British officers. It is a daunting task, but one that Macintyre manages with aplomb. "Operation Mincemeat" (an apt name for a plan involving a dead body) is an intriguing and beguiling look into the lengths that intelligence officers had to go to for what might seem like a small outcome in the grand scheme of things. The paperback edition allows the author to address some interesting information that came to light after the original publication, serving as several postscripts to the fascinating story he just told.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Operation mincemeat

Ben Macintyre is a prolific author, one that does his research on the subject. His storytelling of the mincemeat operation was a true cliffhanger. We own the original book written by Ewen Montagu in 1954 called "the man who never was ", this book was written under the auspices of the British government and as such simply did not reveal the total picture or all the facts surrounding the effort. Macintyre's Mincemeat puts the entire operation on a very personal and dramatic level, leaving every small detail that makes the read so enjoyable.
1 people found this helpful