This image is the cover for the book Okewood of the Secret Service, Classics To Go

Okewood of the Secret Service, Classics To Go

No Herr Doktor Clubfoot this time around but the Okewood family returns for another battle with German espionage. The (unnamed) chief of the British Secret Service thinks very highly of Francis Okewood but he's occupied in spy business on the Continent right now so brother Desmond is tapped to tackle a plot which threatens to unleash squadrons of U-boats onto a convoy transporting American doughboys bound for the Western Front. (Goodreads)

Valentine Williams

George Valentine Williams, (1883–1946) was a journalist and writer of popular fiction. Williams was born in 1883. He was the eldest son of the chief editor at Reuters; both his brother and an uncle were also journalists. He replaced Austin Harrison as the Reuters correspondent in Berlin in 1905, aged 21. In 1908, he left Reuters to join the Daily Mail, filing stories from Paris and covering the Portuguese revolution of 1910. He was in the Balkans at the outbreak of World War I and became one of the first accredited war correspondents in March 1915. William Beach Thomas had been reporting the war for the Daily Mail in the period before official accreditations were granted. When the British government relented its opposition to the presence of journalists in 1915, having been warned by Theodore Roosevelt that reporting limitations were affecting public opinion in the United States, Williams stepped into the role. In December 1915, Williams enlisted for service in the Irish Guards and Beach Thomas took his place as an accredited reporter in France. Williams was too old for active service at the outbreak of World War II. He joined the Secret Intelligence Service, vetting potential new recruits such as Malcolm Muggeridge and Kim Philby. He was transferred to the British Embassy in Washington in 1941 but soon after left for Hollywood, where he worked as a scriptwriter for Twentieth-Century Fox and Metro-Goldwyn Mayer.

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