The bastard brigade The true story of the renegade scientists and spies who sabotaged the Nazi atomic bomb

Sam Kean

Book - 2019

Traces the story of a renegade group of soldiers, scientists, and spies who were sent into Axis territory to spy on and sabotage Germany's nuclear weapons research and prevent Hitler from obtaining a nuclear bomb.

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Subjects
Published
New York : Little, Brown and Company 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Sam Kean (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xii, 447 pages, 24 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color) ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 429-433) and index.
ISBN
9780316381680
  • Author's Note
  • Prologue: Summer of '44
  • Part I. Prewar, to 1939
  • Chapter 1. Professor Berg
  • Chapter 2. Near Misses and Big Hits
  • Chapter 3. Fast and Slow
  • Chapter 4. Crimea to Hollywood
  • Chapter 5. Division
  • Chapter 6. Spinning out of Control
  • Chapter 7. Banzai Berg
  • Chapter 8. On the Brink
  • Part II. 1940-1941
  • Chapter 9. The Uranium Club
  • Chapter 10. Heavy Water
  • Chapter 11. Phoney to Real
  • Chapter 12. Mad Jack
  • Chapter 13. Compromise
  • Chapter 14. Harvard Highs and Lows
  • Chapter 15. Maud Ray Kent
  • Part III. 1942
  • Chapter 16. Resistance
  • Chapter 17. The Fire Heard 'Round the World
  • Chapter 18. Off to War
  • Chapter 19. Brazil and Beyond
  • Chapter 20. Baja Days
  • Chapter 21. V-1, V-2, V-3
  • Chapter 22. Letters
  • Chapter 23. Operation Freshman
  • Chapter 24. The Italian Navigator
  • Part IV. 1943
  • Chapter 25. Secret Messages
  • Chapter 26. Operation Gunnerside
  • Chapter 27. Consolations of Philosophy
  • Chapter 28. "The Fun Will Start"
  • Chapter 29. Seeing Red
  • Chapter 30. Beautiful Peenemünde
  • Chapter 31. PT-109
  • Chapter 32. Blabbermouth
  • Chapter 33. Heavy Water under Fire
  • Chapter 34. Alsos
  • Part V. 1944
  • Chapter 35. Busy Lizzie
  • Chapter 36. Groves's Second Assault
  • Chapter 37. The Ferry
  • Chapter 38. Sharks
  • Chapter 39. Biscay Blues
  • Chapter 40. The Fat Captain
  • Chapter 41. Augers & Peppermint
  • Chapter 42. Remus
  • Chapter 43. Aphrodite vs. Anvil
  • Chapter 44. Valkyrie
  • Chapter 45. Escape and Resistance
  • Chapter 46. Lightning-A
  • Chapter 47. Zootsuit Black
  • Chapter 48. Catching Pretty Well
  • Chapter 49. "I'll Be Seeing You"
  • Chapter 50. The Quisling Zoo
  • Chapter 51. Healthy Rays, Healthy Teeth, Healthy Paranoia
  • Chapter 52. The Deadliest Hombre
  • Chapter 53. Nazi U
  • Chapter 54. Uncertainty, Principles
  • Part VI. 1945
  • Chapter 55. Operation Big
  • Chapter 56. The Lonely Organist
  • Chapter 57. Triumph and Loss
  • Chapter 58. Goimany
  • Chapter 59. The Bomb Drops
  • Epilogues: 1946 and Beyond
  • A Thank-You and a Bonus
  • Acknowledgments
  • Major Characters
  • Minor Characters
  • Sources
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

Principles governing nuclear fission were discovered before the outbreak of war in 1939, but the belligerents quickly started plans to turn those principles into weapons of incredible power. The possibility of Hitler gaining possession of the atom's secrets was terrifying for the Allies. For the first time in history, an entire military mission was devoted to derailing an enemy's scientific-research efforts. Kean's (Caesar's Last Breath, 2017) comprehensive and sometimes humorous tale of the efforts to stop the Nazi atomic bomb is an exciting action adventure that enticingly combines science and history. Featuring concise illustrations of atomic physics, each worth a thousand words, and a cast of real-life characters that Ian Fleming, Tom Clancy, and the Marx brothers would have strained to invent, The Bastard Brigade is as entertaining as it is fascinating. Kean's colloquial expressions and metaphors provide levity to the gritty history of a world at war, with the survival of freedom, and possibly humanity, hanging in the balance. He never lets the reader forget what was at stake, often stating that failure could have resulted in the ultimate mushroom cloud. Kean's page-turner about a still too-little-understood chapter in history deserves a prominent place in WWII collections.--James Pekoll Copyright 2019 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Science writer Kean (The Disappearing Spoon) switches topics with this sprawling history of the Western spies, soldiers, and scientists who worked to thwart Nazi development of a nuclear bomb, accompanied by helpful cartoon illustrations of the relevant scientific concepts. The chronological account begins by introducing a large cast, including Samuel Goudsmit, an emigre physicist; Moe Berg, a pro baseball catcher turned spy; Boris Pash, a WWI vet who commanded the book's titular brigade; and Navy airman Joseph Kennedy Jr., who died as part of a failed mission to destroy German missile bunkers suspected of being nuclear bomb silos. The point of view shifts among these and other characters, taking them through various adventures, including the bombing of a Norwegian ferry carrying heavy water for Nazi nuclear reactors and an attempt to assassinate German physicist Werner Heisenberg. Kean often takes a jokey tone, which readers will either love or hate (describing Marie Curie, he writes "the old lioness roused herself and barged into the lab"), and the majority of sources are secondary, leaving it unclear how he reconstructed dialogue. Readers who love spy stories will enjoy this entertaining book, but WWII aficionados and scholars may want to pass it by. Agent: Rick Broadhead, Rick Broadhead & Associates Literary Agency. (July)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An exciting history of the battle for atomic supremacy during World War II.The core mission of the quasi-military group called "Alsos," part of the Manhattan Project, which was led by colorful scientist Boris Pash, was to determine the extent of Nazi efforts to produce an atomic bomb and to thwart it by any means possible. The Reich, after all, had world-class physicists like Nobel laureate Werner Heisenberg. The Allies, too, had considerable talent, most notably Enrico Fermi. Science writer Kean (Caesar's Last Breath: Decoding the Secrets of the Air Around Us, 2017, etc.) enlists several supporting players who had largely incidental, though dramatic, parts in the effort to deny the Germans' attempts to create an atomic bomb. There was Moe Berg, a spy and professional baseball catcher, who had the chance to capture or kill Heisenbergbut he was uncertain. Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. perished in a nutty scheme to destroy what was thought to be a delivery system for nuclear weapons. The cast of characters, all well delineated by the author, include Irne Joliot-Curie and Frdric Joliot, Robert Oppenheimer, Wernher von Braun, and Gen. Leslie Groves. "Known as a brilliant but ruthless managersimultaneously the best construction foreman and the biggest asshole in the militaryGroves was in charge of all army construction within the United States and on offshore bases at the war's outset," writes the author, who helps readers keep other characters straight with amusing descriptors: A colonel at Rennes was a "big swinging dick"; a "babbling" Neils Bohr "was simply incapable of keeping his trap shut." Throughout, Kean eschews erudite fastidiousness for consistent action and brio. Beginning with the title, the narrative is an engrossing cinematic drama, not an academic text. (Spoiler: Hitler, who was never much interested in science, lost.)Vivid derring-do moves swiftly through a carefully constructed espionage thriller. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.