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Marthe McKenna (1892–1966)

Author of I was a spy!

6+ Works 33 Members 1 Review

About the Author

Includes the name: Marthe Cnokaert McKenna

Works by Marthe McKenna

I was a spy! (1933) 24 copies
Spies I Knew (2014) 3 copies
My Master Spy (1950) 2 copies
A spy was born (1935) 2 copies
Hunt the spy 1 copy
Lancer Spy 1 copy

Associated Works

The History of Piracy (1932) — Contributor — 84 copies
Fifty Amazing Stories of the Great War (1936) — Contributor — 25 copies
Fifty Amazing Secret Service Dramas (1937) — Contributor — 16 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
McKenna, Martha Mathilde Cnokaert
Birthdate
1892-10-28
Date of death
1966-01-08
Burial location
Westrozebeke, Belgium
Gender
female
Nationality
Belgium
Birthplace
Westrozebeke, Belgium
Place of death
Westrozebeke, Belgium
Occupations
novelist
memoirist
intelligence agent
spy
Awards and honors
Legion d'Honneur
Short biography
Marthe McKenna, née Cnockaert, was born in Westrozebeke, Belgium. At the start of World War I, she was a medical student at Ghent University, having previously trained as a nurse. She spoke English, French, Flemish, and German, which made her a valued asset to the German military hospital in her occupied hometown where she went to work as a nurse. She was then recruited by British Intelligence and gathered information while nursing and working in her parents’ café. After a bungled sabotage attempt under a German ammunition depot, she was caught and sentenced to death; but thanks to her having received the Iron Cross for her work nursing German soldiers, her sentence was commuted to imprisonment. After the war, she was released and recognized by the British and French governments for her intelligence services. She married John McKenna, a British army officer, and wrote novels as well as her memoirs, I Was a Spy! for which Winston Churchill contributed the foreword. A Hollywood film version of her memoir was released in 1933.

Members

Reviews

This is the account of Marthe Cnockaert (later Marthe McKenna), a Belgian nursing student who ended up becoming a spy for the Allies during the First World War. Her position as a nurse at the hospital and her family’s ownership of a well-frequented cafe made her ideally placed to find out information that the Allies needed to win the war. She was even given the Iron Cross by the Germans for her bravery in treating the soldiers, which boosted her trust factor further.

Marthe tells her story with verve and candour, including the account of how she was finally caught. The book reads like an adventure story, except that it happened in real life. Winston Churchill, in his foreword to this book, states that he was up until 4 a.m. finishing this book, and it’s easy to see how that could happen. This is recommended for people interested in learning more about the First World War on the home front, and about resourceful women during this period.… (more)
 
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rabbitprincess | May 27, 2018 |

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Statistics

Works
6
Also by
3
Members
33
Popularity
#421,955
Rating
3.2
Reviews
1
ISBNs
6