Close
(0) items
You have no items in your shopping cart.
All Categories
    Filters
    Preferences
    Search

    The War Magician: The man who conjured victory in the desert

    £9.99

    The incredible true story of the greatest illusionist of modern times and the man who altered the course of the second world war.
    Soon to be a major film starring Benedict Cumberbatch

    ISBN: 9781474625340
    AuthorFisher, David
    PublisherNameOrion Publishing Co
    Pub Date31/03/2022
    BindingPaperback
    Pages368
    Availability: Temporarily Out of Stock

    The incredible true story of the greatest illusionist of modern times and the man who altered the course of the second world war.

    Soon to be a major film starring Benedict Cumberbatch

    'A richly entertaining read' SUNDAY TIMES

    Jasper Maskelyne was a world famous magician and illusionist in the 1930s. When war broke out, he volunteered his services to the British Army and was sent to Egypt when the desert war began.

    Here, he used his unique skills to save the vital port of Alexandria from German bombers and to 'hide' the Suez Canal from them. He invented all sorts of camouflage methods to make trucks look like tanks and vice versa. On Malta he developed 'the world's first portable holes': fake bomb craters used to fool the Germans into thinking they had hit their targets.

    His war culminated in the brilliant deception plan that helped win the Battle of El Alamein: the creation of an entire dummy army in the middle of the desert.

    Write your own review
    • Only registered users can write reviews
    *
    *
    • Bad
    • Excellent
    *
    *
    *
    *

    The incredible true story of the greatest illusionist of modern times and the man who altered the course of the second world war.

    Soon to be a major film starring Benedict Cumberbatch

    'A richly entertaining read' SUNDAY TIMES

    Jasper Maskelyne was a world famous magician and illusionist in the 1930s. When war broke out, he volunteered his services to the British Army and was sent to Egypt when the desert war began.

    Here, he used his unique skills to save the vital port of Alexandria from German bombers and to 'hide' the Suez Canal from them. He invented all sorts of camouflage methods to make trucks look like tanks and vice versa. On Malta he developed 'the world's first portable holes': fake bomb craters used to fool the Germans into thinking they had hit their targets.

    His war culminated in the brilliant deception plan that helped win the Battle of El Alamein: the creation of an entire dummy army in the middle of the desert.