Goodbye Mickey Mouse
by Len Deighton | Literature & Fiction | This book has not been rated.
ISBN: 0586054480 Global Overview for this book
ISBN: 0586054480 Global Overview for this book
Registered by Davros-10 of Banyo, Queensland Australia on 12/30/2005
This Book is Currently in the Wild!
1 journaler for this copy...
From the back cover:
"ENGLAND 1944
In Goodbye Mickey Mouse, Len Deighton has written his best novel yet: a brilliant, multidimensional picture of what it is to be at war ... and what it was to be in love in the England of 1944.
'The sheer charge of the writing swept me into another world' - H R F Keating, The Times
'It is a novel of memory, satisfying on every imaginable level, but truly astonishing In Its recreation of a time and place through minute detail. Deighton has written well of the air before, nonfictionally, and he informs us in an afterword that it took six years of research to do this novel. It shows. The only way you could know more about flying a P-51 Mustang, after reading this book, is to have flown one' - WASHINGTON POST
'He writes, as usual, with authority and a superb sense of period' - DAILY TELEGRAPH"
This 1994 HarperCollins paperback has the cover shown here, not the one on the Bookshelf (which I also have a copy of in my TBR pile).
"ENGLAND 1944
In Goodbye Mickey Mouse, Len Deighton has written his best novel yet: a brilliant, multidimensional picture of what it is to be at war ... and what it was to be in love in the England of 1944.
'The sheer charge of the writing swept me into another world' - H R F Keating, The Times
'It is a novel of memory, satisfying on every imaginable level, but truly astonishing In Its recreation of a time and place through minute detail. Deighton has written well of the air before, nonfictionally, and he informs us in an afterword that it took six years of research to do this novel. It shows. The only way you could know more about flying a P-51 Mustang, after reading this book, is to have flown one' - WASHINGTON POST
'He writes, as usual, with authority and a superb sense of period' - DAILY TELEGRAPH"
This 1994 HarperCollins paperback has the cover shown here, not the one on the Bookshelf (which I also have a copy of in my TBR pile).