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Beacons in the Night: With the OSS and Tito's Partisans in Wartime Yugoslavia

AUTHOR: Franklin Lindsay
ISBN: 0804721238

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         Editorial Review

Beacons in the Night: With the OSS and Tito's Partisans in Wartime Yugoslavia
- Book Review,
by Franklin Lindsay


From Publishers Weekly
Lindsay's memoir of his experiences as an American OSS officer with Tito's Partisans stands as a classic work of Resistance literature, but the book's overriding importance lies in its clarification of the ethnic/religious tensions that led to the present Balkan tragedy. Lindsay describes the two competing WW II resistance movements in Yugoslavia, both dedicated to engaging German forces needed elsewhere but with different postwar goals. Tito planned to turn the country into a Moscow-directed communist state; his rival, Chetnik leader Draza Mikhailovic, was determined to restore the monarchy and to continue the prewar dominance by the Serbs. On this basis, a civil war raged throughout the land even as the rivals fought against the German occupation. "The ethnic hatred that fueled the communal violence," writes the author, "seemed deeply embedded in the souls of the inhabitants." The book combines a rousing personal adventure story with new information on the Partisan contribution to the Allied war effort, and at the same time provides a useful lesson in Balkan history that is directly pertinent to the current bloodshed. Lindsay, retired chairman of the Itek Corporation, is an Associate of the Center for International Affairs at Harvard. Photos. Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Kirkus Reviews
Exciting OSS/Serbo-Croatian adventure circa 1944, by Lindsay (Associate/Harvard's Center for International Affairs). Respectfully introduced by John Kenneth Galbraith, Lindsay's memoir preserves in well-crafted prose a legendary period, proving beyond doubt that Donovan's Daredevils were not all Ivy League triflers. A young engineer with a smattering of useful languages, the author talked himself into an assignment that began with parachuting into Yugoslavia to work with Tito's partisans and led to a hardscrabble existence that lost novelty but never danger. In precise, well-remembered detail, supported by archives and some thousand pages of radio dispatches, Lindsay presents the daily complexities of the assignment. Working with Communists, plagued by irregular supply drops, dependent on cranky radios that required large batteries, pursued by ever-efficient German intelligence and military units, saddled with inept local explosives ``experts,'' and subsisting on anything from horse meat to dough-balls, he blew up major bridges and tunnels, was nearly blown up himself, and lived a life that, as told here, is half For Whom the Bell Tolls and half Lawrence of Arabia. Especially clear is the element of human error (usually born of nationalism and compounded by bureaucracy): At one point, such error causes the partial failure of what could have been a brilliant mission; at another, it results in the loss of two British supply planes. Lindsay also presents a lucid picture of local customs, personalities, and nationalities, as well as of the Nazi exploitation of ethnic enmities that are unchanged to this day. Nor is he without humor, as in his account of a riding lesson interrupted by a randy stallion. An impressive document that will interest WW II buffs, historians, and anyone who likes a tale of hands-on derring-do. -- Copyright ©1993, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.


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         Book Review

Beacons in the Night: With the OSS and Tito's Partisans in Wartime Yugoslavia
- Book Reviews,
by Franklin Lindsay

Beacons in the Night: With the OSS and Tito's Partisans in Wartime Yugoslavia

ANNOTATION

With an eye for vivid detail, Lindsay relates the crossing of the German frontier at night, and traces the evolution of Yugoslavia's Partisan leadership from underground Communist organizers to national political leaders. Photos.

FROM THE PUBLISHER

An absorbing account of wartime intelligence work as it really was: tough, dangerous, and carried out with mixed success.

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

Lindsay's memoir of his experiences as an American OSS officer with Tito's Partisans stands as a classic work of Resistance literature, but the book's overriding importance lies in its clarification of the ethnic/religious tensions that led to the present Balkan tragedy. Lindsay describes the two competing WW II resistance movements in Yugoslavia, both dedicated to engaging German forces needed elsewhere but with different postwar goals. Tito planned to turn the country into a Moscow-directed communist state; his rival, Chetnik leader Draza Mikhailovic, was determined to restore the monarchy and to continue the prewar dominance by the Serbs. On this basis, a civil war raged throughout the land even as the rivals fought against the German occupation. ``The ethnic hatred that fueled the communal violence,'' writes the author, ``seemed deeply embedded in the souls of the inhabitants.'' The book combines a rousing personal adventure story with new information on the Partisan contribution to the Allied war effort, and at the same time provides a useful lesson in Balkan history that is directly pertinent to the current bloodshed. Lindsay, retired chairman of the Itek Corporation, is an Associate of the Center for International Affairs at Harvard. Photos. (Sept.)

BookList - Roland Green

This stout volume is the memoirs of a World War II OSS agent who spent most of his service in the Balkans with Tito's partisans. Lindsay also had some contact with virtually every political faction and ethnic group then in Yugoslavia and now engaged in the internecine warfare rending that nation's corpse. This makes his book a crackling good tale of covert operations, OSS-style (and for eccentricity and creativity, the OSS need yield to no other U.S. agency before or since), and of World War II adventure. It is also a useful contribution to the literature (discussed in a helpful bibliographical note) on the single bloodiest post-Cold War crisis in Europe. Valuable for both World War II and current-events collections.


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