Sulzberger, Marina, Letters and Diaries of Marina Sulzberger, New York: Crown, 1978
   Teitgen, Pierre-Henri, Faites entrer le témoin suivant, Paris: Ouest France, 1988
   Thompson, Laura, Life in a Cold Climate: Nancy Mitford, London: Review, 2003
   Thorez, Maurice, Fils du peuple, Paris: Éditions sociales, 1949
   Tillon, Charles, On chantait rouge, Paris: Laffont, 1976
   Todd, Olivier, André Malraux: Une vie, Paris: Gallimard, 1999
   Train, Susan (ed.), Le Théâtre de la mode, Paris: Le May, 1990
   Triboulet, Raymond, Un Gaulliste de la IVe, Paris: Plon, 1958
   Veillon, Dominique, Le Franc-Tireur, Paris: Flammarion, 1978
   ——— La Mode sous l’Occupation, Paris: Payot, 1990
   Vendroux, Jacques, Souvenirs de famille et journal politique, Paris: Plon, 1974
   Verdès-Leroux, Jeannine, Au Service du parti: Le parti communiste, les intellectuels et la culture (1944–1956), Paris: Fayard-Minuit, 1983
   Vernier, Claude, Tendre Exil, Paris: La Découverte-Maspéro, 1983
   Vian, Boris, Manuel de Saint-Germain-des-Prés, Paris: Chêne, 1974
   Villon, Pierre, Résistant de la première heure, Paris: Éditions sociales, 1983
   Voldman, Danielle, Attention Mines, 1944–1946, Paris: France-Empire, 1985
   Wall, Irwin, French Communism in the Era of Stalin, Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1983
   ——— The United States and the Makingof Post-War France (1945–1954), Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991
   White, Edmund, Jean Genet, London: Chatto & Windus, 1993
   White, Sam, Sam White’s Paris, London: New English Library, 1983
   Wieviorka, Annette, Ils étaient juifs, résistants, communistes, Paris: Denoël, 1986
   ——— Déportation et génocide, Paris: Plon, 1992
   Wilson, Edmund, A Literary Chronicle of the Forties, London: W. H. Allen, 1951
   Wurmser, André, Fidèlement vôtre: Soixante ans de vie politique et littéraire, Paris: Grasset, 1979
   Ziegler, Philip, King Edward VIII, London: Collins, 1990
   Photographic Acknowledgements
   Illustrations 4,5,6 and 13 are reproduced by permission of Roger-Viollet; numbers 1 and 2 by Robert Doisneau, permission of Rapho; and numbers 12 and 16 by Willy Ronis, permission of Rapho. Number 3 is reproduced by permission of the Brassaï estate; 8 by permission of the Horst estate; 9 by permission of Keystone; 10 by permission of the Christian Dior Archive © ADAGP, Paris and DACS, London 1994; 11 by permission of Paris Match; 17 by permission of the André Ostier estate; and 19 by permission of the Service des Musées©DACS 1994.
   We are extremely grateful to the late Mrs David Bruce for kindly lending illustration 18. The remainder come from the albums of Lady Diana Cooper and her family, and if any photographer or archive owns the copyright of any of them, they should contact the publisher.
   * The idea for a union in fact came from a Frenchman, Jean Monnet, one of the most influential men of his age. This remarkable economic planner, then in London on an arms-purchasing mission, had already won the complete trust and respect of both Churchill and Roosevelt. He later inspired the Victory Plan in the United States.
   * When the Bishop of Arras was arrested after the Liberation, the British Embassy in Paris reported that ‘much surprise was expressed [by the Vatican] at the accusations against the Bishop of Arras since he has had the reputation at the Vatican of holding extreme democratic views’.
   * That day Leclerc’s division lost seventy-one men killed and 225 wounded; thirty-five armoured vehicles were destroyed, along with 117 other vehicles.
   * Estimates of the number killed vary greatly. Many seem too high. The Archives de la Ville de Paris record 2,873 Parisians, including inhabitants of the inner suburbs, killed during the month of August.
   * In the first opinion poll carried out since before the war, the Institut Français d’Opinion Publique found that per cent of its sample in Paris claimed to have been present that day. ‘C’est un plébiscite’ was a widespread comment.
   * One of Palewski’s bodyguards remarked that he had ‘more nicknames than a boules club in Marseilles’. The bodyguards knew him as ‘la Lavande’ from the overpowering strength of his eau de toilette. In Le Canard enchaîné he was known as ‘Lodoiska’ – the nickname given to the censorship; politicians called him ‘l’Empereur’, while the female secretaries, of whom the vast majority had no doubt received his energetic attentions, referred to himironically as ‘le beau Gaston’.
   * De Gaulle’s right-wing opponents, who claimed he was a Soviet puppet at this time, were much mistaken. The detailed briefing document for this visit, prepared by Dimitrov for Molotov and Stalin, leaves no doubt: ‘Although his outward attitude towards the [French] Communists is correct, he is prepared to use all possible means of hidden struggle against them.’
   * De Gaulle, however, was seen as relatively uninterested in the fate of the deportees. Marguerite Duras could not forgive him for having said on 3 April: ‘The days of tears are past. The days of glory have returned.’
   *In fact there were only ninety-one cases in Paris, and only seventy-seven Parisians died of it that year, half the figure of twenty years earlier.
   *MRP stood for ‘Mouvement Républicain Populaire’.Le Canard enchaîné pretended that it stood for ‘Machine à Ramasser les Pétainistes’.
   †Popova’s delegation of ten women was supposed to represent a cross-section of Soviet womanhood. It included a sculptress, a writer, a medical scientist, an actress, a professor, the director of the Lenin Library, a hero of the Soviet Union and a worker.
   * Teitgen makes no mention in his memoirs of his meeting with the American ambassador and protests vehemently, but unconvincingly, that de Gaulle exerted no influence in the handling of the Pétain case.
   * An agreement on sharing military intelligence was concluded in Paris on 3 July 1945 between General Bloch-Dassault (brother of the aircraft manufacturer Marcel Dassault) and Brigadier-General Betts of US military intelligence, but the United States handed over very little. They too were influenced by the British distrust from 1940, when the French insisted on keeping their antiquated code system, which the Germans had read with such ease.
   * Marie-Madeleine finally blew this agent’s cover in 1954, when the first itemon the agenda of the politburo meeting was to discuss the minutes of the latest meeting of the French National Defence Committee. She arranged for the publication of these minutes, which caused a national outcry, followed by the arrest of the Permanent Secretary of the Defence Committee.
   * Gouin’s government had not only set about reorganizing the intelligence service as the Service de Documentation Extérieure et de Contre-Espionage. It had also put an end to the Gaullist proconsuls from the Liberation, the Commissaires de la République.
   * One could hardly blame Koestler for being pleased at such figures, especially since he had heard that ‘the French Communist Party had orders to buy up every single copy of Le Zéro et l’infini immediately’, so in this way he was being ‘enriched indefinitely from Communist Party funds’.
   * Félix Gouin sued Farge for the allegations in his book Le Pain de la corruption, but lost the case in March 1948, a setback which finished off any lingering political ambitions.
   * Joanovici was a Bessarabian Jew who had come to France in 1925, where he built up a successful scrap-metal business. During Depreux’s investigations, Joanovici was arrested, but then released. He fled to the American zone of Germany in 1947. He was finally put on trial in 1949, condemned to five years in prison and fined 600,000 francs.
   * Aimé and Marguerite Maeght had made their first lucrative deals in the art world by bartering food for paintings during the Occupation (Marguerite’s parents were in the grocery business). In this way, they were able to acquire a number of works by Bonnard and Matisse.
   * Even though Caffery revealed to Bevin and Duff Cooper that France would almost certainly not receive
 economic aid if Communists were allowed to become ministers again, there is absolutely no evidence to support the assertion that Ramadier had been blackmailed in the spring by the US government into expelling them from his administration.
   * Wages had risen by 17 per cent while prices had increased on average by 51 per cent.
   * The French were the most successful in their endeavours. Jean Monnet persuaded David Bruce that the government should be allowed to divert Marshall Plan funds into industrial regeneration.
   * Representatives of the New York school had first exhibited in the Galerie du Luxembourg in 1947, but Jackson Pollock’s first show in Paris, organized by the art critic Michel Tapié, took place only in 1951.
   * The newspaper Combat on 12 May, following ‘the night of the barricades’, warned that Paris would become ‘Budapest-sur-Seine’.
   * The final digits of the NARA document reference give the date of receipt by month, day and year: thus dossier no. 851.00/12-448, was received on December 4,1948.
   Index
   Abetz, Otto, 34, 64, 85, 133, 135, 137, 143, 156
   Académie Française, 137, 173, 199, 373
   Acheson, Dean, 228, 276, 285, 356, 357–8, 359
   Action, 360
   Action Française, 137
   Airaud, Arthur, 81
   Alcan, Louise, 146
   Allied Military Government for Occupied Territories (AMGOT), 29, 36
   Alphand, Hervé, 101, 114, 119, 120, 215–16, 245, 288, 289, 322
   and Marshall Plan, 286
   Alsop, Susan Mary see Patten, Mrs William
   Altman, Georges, 334
   Amado, Jorge, 336
   Amery, John, 66
   Amery, Leo, 66
   Amouroux, Henri, 87
   Anouilh, Jean, 140, 179, 184
   Antelme, Robert, 146, 148
   Aragon, Louis, 18, 111, 138, 141, 142–3, 152, 158, 177, 183–4, 221, 332, 373, 376–8, 388
   Argenlieu, Admiral Thierry d’, 54, 238, 279, 307
   Arletty (Léonie Bathiat), 85, 133–4, 136, 365, 380
   Armée Secrète, 25, 28
   Aron, Raymond, 59
   and Les Temps modernes, 178, 248, 323, 329–30, 344
   Artaud, Antonin, 175
   Arzt, Richard, 151
   Association France-URSS, 355, 382
   Astier de la Vigerie, Baron Emmanuel d’, 21, 339
   Astier de la Vigerie, General Baron François, 21
   Astier de la Vigerie, Baron Henri, 21
   Astruc, AlexAndré, 140, 315, 318
   Attlee, Rt. Hon. Clement, 182
   and Marshall Plan, 287
   Audiberti, Jacques, 312
   Auriol, President Vincent, 255, 274, 283, 298, 306, 359
   Auzello, Claude, 50, 51
   Ayen, Duchess d’, 186
   Ayer, A. J., 74, 95, 174
   Baker, Josephine, 61–2, 367
   Baldrige, Letitia, 362
   Baldwin, James, 352
   Balenciaga, Cristóbal, 253
   Ballard, Bettina, 253, 255
   Balmain, Pierre, 257, 308
   Barbie, Klaus, 28, 385
   Barrault, Jean-Louis, 133, 179, 372
   Bath, Daphne, Marchioness of, 111–12
   Battle, Lucius, 357–8
   Baumel, Jacques, 95
   Beach, Sylvia, 34, 59
   Beaumont, Comte Étienne de, 256
   Beaurepaire, André, 252
   Beauvoir, Simone de, 28, 51, 54–5, 60, 61, 73, 74, 125, 126, 130, 141, 173, 174–80, 216, 232, 313–14, 342-3, 344
   on youth, 170
   and VE Day, 197
   a day in the life of, 234–5
   and Koestler, 246–8, 294
   and Capote, 350
   Beckett, Samuel, 152, 178, 329
   Bedell-Smith, General Walter, 126
   Belmondo, Paul, 136, 180
   Benda, Julien, 143, 333
   Benes, President Eduard, 322
   Benoist-Méchin, Jacques, 132, 137, 141, 166, 168
   Bénouville, General Pierre de, 27, 205, 308, 323, 326, 379
   Bérard, Christian, 71, 180, 252, 253, 256, 289, 313, 318
   Béraud, Henri, 138
   Berliet, Marius, 104
   Berlin, Isaiah, 79, 153, 288
   Berlin blockade and airlift, 325–6, 357, 375
   Bernstein, Henri, 308, 364
   Bertaux, Pierre, 95–7
   Berthau, Julien, 39
   Besse, Annie (later Kriegel), 331–2
   Béthouart, General Émile, 29
   Bevin, Rt. Hon. Ernest, 236, 239–40, 242, 243, 275, 288, 357
   and Marshall Plan, 286–7
   Bidault, Georges, 25, 32, 44, 49–50, 54, 122, 154, 204, 206, 211, 273, 275, 282, 296, 308
   as Foreign Minister, 100, 101, 107, 108, 111, 113–14
   visit to Moscow, 116, 119
   and de Gaulle’s resignation, 214
   becomes Prime Minister, 237
   government resigns, 274
   and Marshall Plan, 286–7
   and Germany, 288
   and London Accords, 324
   and new ministry, 372
   Billotte, General Pierre, 44, 46, 223
   Billoux, François, 98, 129, 255, 279–80
   Minister of National Defence, 274–5
   Blaser, Albert (Maxim’s), 75, 85, 364
   Bloomingdale, Donald, 232
   Blum, Léon, 11, 162, 201, 203, 236, 275, 299
   Boegner, Pastor Marc, 47, 51, 78, 84, 86, 87, 121, 142, 157
   and Petain trial, 163
   and Laval trial, 167, 168
   Bogomolov, Sergei, 25, 112, 244, 245, 325
   Bohlen, Charles (‘Chip’), 356, 357, 359
   Boissieu, Captain (later General) Alain de, 47, 388
   marriage to Elisabeth de Gaulle, 214
   Bonbright, James, 228, 301
   Bonnier de la Chapelle, Fernand, 21
   Bonny, Pierre, 155
   Bor-Komorowski, General, 36
   Bost, Jacques-Laurent, 176, 177
   Bouchinet-Serreulles, Claude, 28, 94, 99, 203
   Bouillon, Jo, 62
   Bousquet, Marie-Louise, 256, 372
   Bousquet, René, 13, 385–6
   Boussac, Marcel, 257
   Bradley, General Omar, 41, 44
   Brando, Marlon, 364–5
   Brasillach, Robert, 132–3, 137
   trial and execution, 139–41, 387
   Brassaï, 60, 71
   Breker, Arno, 135–6
   Breton, André, 142, 289–90, 311, 332
   Bridges, Senator, 296
   Bridoux, General Eugène, 65
   Brinon, Fernand de, 65
   Brissac, Duc de, 191
   Brissac, May, Duchesse de, 83, 188
   Broglie, Jacqueline de, 78
   Brouillet, René, 50
   Bruce, Hon. David, 41, 50, 51, 53, 77, 241, 358-60, 363, 372
   and Marshall Plan, 354, 369–70
   becomes US ambassador to France, 356–7
   and Coca-Cola war, 359–60
   Bruce, Evangeline, 72, 356, 358, 372
   Bruce–Lockhart, John, 225
   Bruckberger, Father Raymond-Léopold, 39, 60, 141
   Bruller, Jean (‘Vercors’), 111, 336, 337, 339, 343
   Brunhoff, Michael de, 256
   Buber-Neumann, Margarete, 341
   Buckmaster, Maurice, 24
   Bullitt, Hon. William, 196
   Billow, Claus von, 192
   Burckhardt, Carl, 111
   Bureau Central de Renseignements et d’ Action (BCRA), 24, 28, 233
   Burroughs, William, 380
   Bussières, Amédée, 35, 155
   Butor, Michel, 387
   Byrnes, James, 236, 239, 240, 243, 276
   Cachin, Marcel, 57, 112, 173, 215, 236
   Cadogan, Sir Alexander, 108, 115
   Caffery, Hon. Jefferson, 101–2, 108, 109–10, 112, 113, 122, 160, 163, 203, 211, 226, 227, 234, 241, 275, 278–9, 281, 288, 308, 326
   on black market, 125
   and SHAEF, 127
   and de Gaulle’s r
esignation, 214–15
   and French right, 223
   and Marshall Plan, 287, 292n
   and strikes of 1947, 301
   and RPF, 323
   Caffery, Mrs Jefferson (Gertrude), 109–10
   Cagoule (Comité Secret d’ Action Révolutionnaire), 15, 63
   Calas, Raoul, 304–5
   Callender, Harold, 73
   Campan, Zanie de, 177
   Camphin, René, 329
   Camus, Albert, 45, 60, 140, 142, 143, 174, 175, 177, 178, 315, 342–3, 351
   and Les Temps modernes, 178, 344
   with Koestler, 247–8, 293–4
   Camus, Francine, 247–8, 342–3
   Canard enchaîné, Le, Ioon, 139, 160n, 386
   reappearance of, 173–4
   Capa, Robert, 73
   Capitant, René, 273
   Capote, Truman, 350–51
   Carne, Marcel, 175
   Caron, Leslie, 318
   Casanova, Laurent, 200, 237, 331, 334, 336, 337, 360
   Cassou, Jean, 339, 343
   Casteja, Emmeline de, 85
   Castellane, Marquis Boni de, 84, 357
   Castellane, Comte Jean de, 84, 85
   Catroux, General Georges, 15
   Cazalet, Peter, 68
   Cazalis, Anne-Marie, 314, 315–16
   Céline (Louis Ferdinand Destouches), 64, 65, 88, 131, 137, 141, 168, 380–81
   Chaban-Delmas, Jacques, 32–3, 54
   Chack, Paul, 132
   Chambrun, Comtesse Josée de (née Laval), 166
   Chambrun, Comte René de, 166
   Chanel, Gabrielle, 134–5
   Charpentier, Jacques, 43, 86, 159, 162, 167
   Chastenet de Puységur, Comte Armand-Marie de, 137
   Châteaubriant, Alphonse de, 65, 131
   Chautemps, Camille, 8
   Chauvel, Jean, 115, 286, 288
   
 
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