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M. R. D. Foot (1919–2012)

Author of The Oxford Companion to World War II

15+ Works 1,037 Members 9 Reviews 2 Favorited

About the Author

Professor MRD Foot CBE was the pre-eminent British authority on the Special Operations Executive (SOE) and Western European resistance to Nazi occupation in the Second World War. He established his reputation with The SOE in France (1966), the first of his acclaimed works. Pen and Sword Books are show more proud to have published both Six Faces of Courage (2003) and his Memories of a SOE Historian, reprinted here. MRD Foot died in 2012. show less
Disambiguation Notice:

Please do not combine M.R.D. Foot with Michael Foot - the former is the military historian, the latter the former Labour Party leader.

Works by M. R. D. Foot

Associated Works

Ill Met by Moonlight (1950) — Introduction, some editions — 544 copies, 12 reviews
The Double-Cross System in the War of 1939 to 1945 (1972) — Introduction, some editions — 494 copies, 9 reviews
The Mammoth Book of True War Stories (1992) — Contributor — 97 copies
SOE and the Resistance: As Told in Times Obituaries (2011) — Foreword — 11 copies
Midlothian speeches, 1879 (1971) — Introduction, some editions — 4 copies
The Gladstone diaries. Volume 1: 1825-1832 (1968) — Editor — 3 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Foot, Michael Richard Daniell
Birthdate
1919-12-14
Date of death
2012-02-18
Gender
male
Education
University of Oxford (New College)
Occupations
army officer
historian
professor
Organizations
British Army
Relationships
Foot, Philippa (wife)
Murdoch, Iris (lover)
Foot, Mirjam (wife)
Nationality
United Kingdom
Disambiguation notice
Please do not combine M.R.D. Foot with Michael Foot - the former is the military historian, the latter the former Labour Party leader.
Associated Place (for map)
United Kingdom

Members

Reviews

11 reviews
Certainly the best overall assessment of SOE's role in Holland and Belgium. Foot's verdict that the debacle in Holland was due solely to repeated errors (mainly on the British side, but often also on the Dutch) seems unassailable. However, it does suffer from the common fate of official histories in that it is comprehensive to the point of being encyclopaediac. Every agent and every mission must be covered, which often means only the barest details are shared. Too often I wanted to know show more more, only to find that the next page contained another mission and introduced another two or three characters. By the end of the book I was too overwhelmed with information to care significantly about much of what I'd read, which was a shame. However, it is still a must-read, if nothing else for the definitive analysis of Englandspiel, which will hopefully put to bed much of the unnecessary rumour and intrigue. show less
Few people knew as much about the highly-secretive SOE - whose task, according to Churchill, was to 'set Europe ablaze' - as M.R.D. Foot. This short book is an introduction to the work of the estimated 15,000 SOE operatives, many of them female, who fought a secret war against Germany, Italy and Japan across three continents. In his attempt to be both comprehensive and brief, Foot clearly struggles. Most sections of the book, especially the final chapters detailing SOE operations across the show more various war zones, feel too brief. He complains about how much remains secret (the book was published in 1984), how much was destroyed and how much information was never committed to paper. Years after this book appeared, there were new revelations, some spectacular ones too, including the secret plan to kill Adolf Hitler. One wonders what other secrets lay hidden in the archives, or which were buried with the men and women who carried those secrets to their graves. show less
Certainly the best overall assessment of SOE's role in Holland and Belgium. Foot's verdict that the debacle in Holland was due solely to repeated errors (mainly on the British side, but often also on the Dutch) seems unassailable. However, it does suffer from the common fate of official histories in that it is comprehensive to the point of being encyclopaediac. Every agent and every mission must be covered, which often means only the barest details are shared. Too often I wanted to know show more more, only to find that the next page contained another mission and introduced another two or three characters. By the end of the book I was too overwhelmed with information to care significantly about much of what I'd read, which was a shame. However, it is still a must-read, if nothing else for the definitive analysis of Englandspiel, which will hopefully put to bed much of the unnecessary rumour and intrigue. show less
½
Good thorough account of the various resistance efforts across Europe. Solid writing and coverage make it well worth reading. Probably more aimed at passionate history types than the casual reader.
½

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Statistics

Works
15
Also by
9
Members
1,037
Popularity
#24,830
Rating
4.0
Reviews
9
ISBNs
55
Languages
2
Favorited
2

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