Dîner avec Edward
- 188pages
- 7 heures de lecture
Isabel Vincent est une journaliste d'investigation canadienne reconnue pour son écriture incisive. Son travail explore souvent des questions sociales complexes, dévoilant des vérités cachées avec un œil vif pour les détails. À travers son style de reportage, elle sonde l'expérience humaine et les dilemmes éthiques qui façonnent notre monde. Vincent apporte un sentiment d'urgence et de profondeur à son journalisme, offrant aux lecteurs un contenu provocateur et stimulant.




A charming, tender and life-affirming memoir of a journalist's unlikely bond with a 93-year-old widower.
"Europe, 1937. Two British sisters, one a dowdy typist, the other a soon-to-be famous romance novelist. One shared passion for opera. With prospects for marriage and families of their own cut down by the scythe of World War I, the Cook sisters have thrown themselves into their love of music, with frequent pilgrimages to Germany and Austria to see their favorite opera stars perform. But now with war clouds gathering and harassment increasing, the stars of Continental opera, many of whom are Jewish, face dark futures under the boot heel of the Nazis. What can two middle-aged British spinsters do about such matters? They can form a secret cabal right under Hitler's nose and get to work saving lives. Along with Austrian conductor Clemens Krauss (a favorite of Hitler, but quietly working with the Cooks) the sisters conspire to bring together worldwide opera aficionados and insiders in an international operation to rescue Jews in the opera from the horrific fate that everyone intuits is coming. By the time war does arrive, the Cooks and their operatives have plucked over two dozen Jewish men and women from the looming maw of the Holocaust and spirited them to safety in England." -- Amazon.com