In 1940, the Nazis sought to silence Europe's soul. One American journalist refused to let them.
When France fell, the greatest artists, writers, and scientists of the continent-including Marc Chagall, Hannah Arendt, and Max Ernst-were trapped in the Vichy port of Marseille, marked for death by the Gestapo. Their only hope was Varian Fry, a 32-year-old classicist who arrived on a three-week tourist visa with a short list of people to save.
Fry quickly realized official rescue was a myth. Defying both the hostile Vichy regime and his own indifferent American State Department, he transformed himself into the head of a clandestine underground network. Operating from a lavish safe house, the Villa Air-Bel, he pioneered the use of forged documents, black-market funding, and treacherous smuggling routes through the Pyrenees.
Over thirteen months, Fry and his small, eclectic team fought bureaucracy, espionage, and betrayal to secure the lives of approximately 2,000 individuals-the intellectual vanguard of the 20th century. Approx.150 pages, 29400 word count
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