
Clare Mulley is an award-winning author, broadcaster and popular historian whose books re-examine the history of the First and Second World Wars through the lives of remarkable women. THE WOMAN WHO SAVED THE CHILDREN, about First World War era child rights pioneer Eglantyne Jebb, won the Daily Mail Biographers' Club Prize, and is now under option. Britain’s first female special agent of the Second World War, Polish-born Krystyna Skarbek, aka Christine Granville, is the subject of THE SPY WHO LOVED, a book which led to Clare being decorated with Poland’s national honour, the Bene Merito. Clare's third book, THE WOMEN WHO FLEW FOR HITLER, long-listed for the Historical Writers Association prize, tells the extraordinary story of Nazi Germany’s only two female test pilots, whose choices and actions put them on opposite sides of history.
Clare writes and reviews for the Telegraph, Spectator, BBC History Magazine and History Today. A popular public speaker, she has given a TEDx talk at Stormont, and spoken at the House of Lords, Royal Albert Hall, National Army Museum, British Library and Warsaw Uprising Museum. Recent TV includes news appearances for Newsnight, Sky News, Channel 5 News, as well as history series for the BBC, Channel 5, More 4 and Netflix.
www.claremulley.com
Clare writes and reviews for the Telegraph, Spectator, BBC History Magazine and History Today. A popular public speaker, she has given a TEDx talk at Stormont, and spoken at the House of Lords, Royal Albert Hall, National Army Museum, British Library and Warsaw Uprising Museum. Recent TV includes news appearances for Newsnight, Sky News, Channel 5 News, as well as history series for the BBC, Channel 5, More 4 and Netflix.
www.claremulley.com