Spitfire Girl

£5.99

Spitfire Girl

An extraordinary tale of courage in World War Two

Biography: historical, political and military Autobiography: historical, political and military Biography: adventurers and explorers Autobiography: adventurers and explorers True war and combat stories Second World War fiction Warfare and defence Air forces and warfare Prisoners of war History Modern warfare Specific wars and campaigns Second World War Spyware

Dinosaur mascot

Language: English

Published by: White Hart Books

Published on: 30th July 2020

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 2 Mb

ISBN: 9781913721015


An extraordinary life in the shadows of war and a Century in the making.

Diana Mackintosh came of age to the drone of sirens alerting the people of Malta to the arrival of relentless flights of belligerent German and Italian menace – the bombers she first imagined as a swarm of black flies, pests that stung and cursed her Mediterranean homeland. The three-year onslaught never took a day off; it was endless, but supplies were not. The hope of a shipment of high protein became an ongoing dream. The only time Diana wasn’t hungry was when she slept. Her story of that time, and in 2020 she is one of the very few remaining who experienced it first-hand, makes it clear why Malta was collectively awarded the George Cross, the highest British civilian honour for heroism. Of course, as she argues, no one was trying to be heroic, but somehow they helped reverse the fortunes of the Second World War in the Mediterranean and North Africa.

Now at the age of 101, Diana is also celebrated for her children’s achievements — she helped her eldest son, Sir Cameron Mackintosh, and worked as his unpaid secretary — and for a life in the wings of British cinema, Hollywood and theatreland. Spitfire Girl recounts Diana’s extraordinary life, more than a century in the making.

Show moreShow less