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Emme Fatatle: A good biography of one of the 20th. Centuries most interesting spys/nonspy...Professor Shipman writes a no hold barred tale of Mata Hari...The book is really two stories. The first is how Margaretha Zelle born of Dutch parents became Mata Hari...Margaretha Zelle was a woman of enormous talents in language who mastered besides her native Dutch, German, French, English and Spanish along with with the languages of the Dutch East Indies where she pent her years as a young woman married to a Dutch Colonial Officer...Marrage, an abusive husband and the hard colonial life were not for her and after a few years she divorced here husband and returned to Holland...This was the begaining of her transformation from a wife and mother to a performer and a high priced courtesan...The second story was how she got involved in espionage and spying or not...Professor Shipman lays out the "factual information" we have on Mata Hari and then leaves it to the reader to determine if Mata Hari was a spy or because of her notarity and the fact that she had been a paid mistress of some many powerful men it was best to silence her...The reader has to determine if she was an agent for the Germans, French, both or some other country, the facts are not clear...If you like an honest well scribed book then you will enjoy Femme Fatle, but don't expect the author to spoon feed you any speculative ending.
Almost Sorry: I could almost feel sorry for Mrs MacLeod (Mata Hari). Almost. As the key factor in her own downfall, she had no one to blame but herself. As she spun her web of lies, mis-truths and deceit, she didn't see her own web closing in around her, until too late. It was a web of her own making. I originally ordered this book through a friend's recommendation based on my friend's claim that here was a "innocent, if naive" woman, just struggling to make ends meet and getting falsley blamed for all of France's war woes and was subsequently executed. That is not how I read the book. While men might be to blame for their own reckless indiscretions and mistakes, they cannot be held liable when someone such as Mata Hari is doing so much of the manipulating. She wanted her cake and eat it, too. Unfortunately, this cake was the guillotine's blade...er, bullet. And the author, whether conscience of it or not, attests to Mata Hari's innocence, which as an impartial "reporter" she shouldn't do, unless she can offer evidence other than what was presented here.
Mata Hari, Spy or Dupe?: Book goes quite in depth with Gerta's early life in the Dutch East Indies with her husband, but it helps to understand her personality. This poor wretch is branded only as a spy by the French who wanted to spy on the Germans and being refused, trumped up charges against her. Seems she was only an exotic dancer that enjoyed men in and out of uniform. Good read, only boring at times. Recommended.
seems neat to me: So, I purchased this book at the behest of some NPR reporter or another, and I did so with my friend Amy in mind. Although not an avid reader, I will try to coax her into this book with the promise of great scandal. Months from now, I envision myself demanding the return of this book so I can read it (as I am sure she will have not) and I will enjoy it thoroughly. Up to this point though, I cannot attest to it's content. The cover is very lovely, though.
Wonderful!: I read for escape, and when I can also learn something along the way then it's even better. Shipman gives us a wonderfully written and fast-paced exciting book. You really feel sympathy for Mata Hari and pain at the horrible traps she walked into. What a wonderful snap-shot of that time in European history. I truly enjoyed every word in this book and highly recommend it.
| Author: | Pat, Shipman | | Binding: | Kindle Edition | | Dewey Decimal Number: | 940.48743092 | | Format: | Kindle Book | | Number Of Pages: | 464 | | Publication Date: | 2007-07-31 | | Release Date: | 2007-07-31 |
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