Les espionnes à Paris

audiobook

Les espionnes à Paris

by Émile Massard

FR·~3 hours

Chapters

Description

A gritty, first‑hand chronicle pulls listeners into the shadowy world of Parisian espionage during the Great War. Drawing on personal recollections and what the author witnessed, the narrative strips away legend to reveal how spies, courtesans and ordinary citizens were caught in a deadly game of secrets and surveillance. The tone is unapologetically stark, reminding the audience that every whispered rumor could have been a matter of life or death.

The book opens with the infamous case of Mata Hari, whose glamorous stage career masked a perilous double life, and follows the swift, often brutal, justice meted out to traitors. Through vivid anecdotes about clandestine meetings, coded messages and the relentless work of counter‑intelligence officers, it exposes the mechanisms that kept France’s capital under constant threat. Readers learn how jealousy, ambition and desperation fed a network of betrayal that the public never fully grasped.

Beyond the sensational headlines, the work underscores a sobering lesson: courage alone is insufficient without sharp perception. By listening, you’ll gain a clearer picture of how ordinary vigilance—seeing and knowing—became France’s most vital weapon in a city cloaked in intrigue.

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Full title

Les espionnes à Paris la vérité sur Mata-Hari, Marguerite Francillard, la femme du cimetière, les marraines, une grande vedette parisienne, la mort de Marussia

Language

fr

Duration

~3 hours (207K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Laurent Vogel, Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by the Bibliothèque nationale de France (BnF/Gallica) at http://gallica.bnf.fr)

Release date

2020-04-02

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Émile Massard

Émile Massard

1857–1932

A journalist, novelist, and public figure in Paris, he moved easily between the worlds of literature, politics, and the press. His work reflects the lively, often turbulent cultural life of France in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

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