The Great Traitors
Condition: SECONDHAND
This is a secondhand book. The jacket image is a photograph of the exact copy we have in stock. This image shows the condition of this book. Further condition remarks are below.
Condition remarks:
Condition: Good. Jacket: Worn/faded, chipped and worn with some minor damage to corners and spine edges; price clipped. Page Condition: yellowed with foxing. Markings: No visible markings on exterior. Binding: Appears intact.
A gripping work of historical non-fiction, The Great Traitors presents the compelling stories of history's most notorious betrayers — men and women who sold out their countries, colleagues, and causes for ideology, money, or personal gain. Judge Gerald Sparrow brings a lawyer's precision and a storyteller's flair to each case, dissecting the motives and methods of figures whose treachery left lasting marks on nations and intelligence communities alike. Written with authoritative confidence, the book argues that treason is never a simple act but a complex web of psychology, circumstance, and moral collapse. Sparrow chronicles each subject with sharp analytical clarity, drawing on his legal background to render verdicts that are as illuminating as they are damning.
Author: Judge Gerald Sparrow
Format: Hardback
Published: 1965, John Long
Genre: True crime
Condition remarks:
Condition: Good. Jacket: Worn/faded, chipped and worn with some minor damage to corners and spine edges; price clipped. Page Condition: yellowed with foxing. Markings: No visible markings on exterior. Binding: Appears intact.
A gripping work of historical non-fiction, The Great Traitors presents the compelling stories of history's most notorious betrayers — men and women who sold out their countries, colleagues, and causes for ideology, money, or personal gain. Judge Gerald Sparrow brings a lawyer's precision and a storyteller's flair to each case, dissecting the motives and methods of figures whose treachery left lasting marks on nations and intelligence communities alike. Written with authoritative confidence, the book argues that treason is never a simple act but a complex web of psychology, circumstance, and moral collapse. Sparrow chronicles each subject with sharp analytical clarity, drawing on his legal background to render verdicts that are as illuminating as they are damning.