In April 1940, the Germans invaded Norway. Within the week, a schoolteacher in a remote fjord village removed every clock from every wall.
It was not an act of sabotage. There were no weapons involved, no radio transmitters, no coded messages. It was something stranger and, as it turned out, more effective than any of these things. It was the deliberate removal of time itself from a German garrison that could not function without it.
Veldal is a village of two hundred and thirty people on an inner arm of a Vestlandet fjord, surrounded on three sides by mountains that receive their first snow in October. The German garrison that arrives in the summer of 1940 finds nothing suspicious: no weapons caches, no Resistance pamphlets, no obviously subversive activity. They find only that the clocks are gone, and that the villagers explain this by reference to a centuries-old tradition of reading time from the light and the tides, and that no regulation in the occupation's legal framework requires a Norwegian village to keep mechanical clocks on its walls.
Hauptmann Werner Brandt, the garrison's commandant, knows something is wrong. His clocks are unreliable. His patrol schedule runs on a timing he cannot fully trust. His morning assemblies happen at times that feel slightly off from the times he intends. The village operates with an ordinariness that is just slightly too consistent to be entirely natural. He cannot prove any of this. He cannot find the mechanism. He cannot close the gap.
The gap is exactly where Sigrid Aas, the village schoolteacher who removed the first clock, is working.
Over five years, Veldal's temporal manipulation, maintained through watchmaker Torbjorn Vik's precise clock-adjustment technique and the village's genuine four-hundred-year tradition of natural-time navigation, creates a controlled environment in which the garrison never quite knows when it is. The gap between the garrison's believed time and the actual time is where the resistance fighters move. It is where two hundred and thirty transit fighters and couriers pass through on their way through the fjord network. It is where, for six critical weeks in the spring of 1943, fifty Milorg fighters are sheltered while planning the disruption of a German naval logistics depot that reshapes the war in western Norway.
Drawing on the documented history of the Norwegian hjemmefronten, the Milorg military resistance organization, the XU intelligence network, and the specific techniques of psychological and environmental resistance employed by Norwegian communities during the occupation, The Clockless Village is a novel about the most invisible weapon any resistance can possess: control over what the enemy believes is real.
The clock on the garrison wall was always wrong. The village knew exactly what time it was.
Mesmerizing, precise, and quietly devastating. Essential reading for fans of The Snowman by Jo Nesbo, Between the Lines by Jodi Picoult, and All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr.
Les informations fournies dans la section « Synopsis » peuvent faire référence à une autre édition de ce titre.
Vendeur : California Books, Miami, FL, Etats-Unis
Etat : New. N° de réf. du vendeur I-9798235144637
Quantité disponible : Plus de 20 disponibles
Vendeur : PBShop.store US, Wood Dale, IL, Etats-Unis
PAP. Etat : New. New Book. Shipped from UK. THIS BOOK IS PRINTED ON DEMAND. Established seller since 2000. N° de réf. du vendeur L0-9798235144637
Quantité disponible : Plus de 20 disponibles
Vendeur : Bluemindbooks, PACHECO, CA, Etats-Unis
Etat : New. New Book. N° de réf. du vendeur NJ-INGR-9798235144637
Quantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Vendeur : PBShop.store UK, Fairford, GLOS, Royaume-Uni
PAP. Etat : New. New Book. Delivered from our UK warehouse in 4 to 14 business days. THIS BOOK IS PRINTED ON DEMAND. Established seller since 2000. N° de réf. du vendeur L0-9798235144637
Quantité disponible : Plus de 20 disponibles
Vendeur : AussieBookSeller, Truganina, VIC, Australie
Paperback. Etat : new. Paperback. In April 1940, the Germans invaded Norway. Within the week, a schoolteacher in a remote fjord village removed every clock from every wall.It was not an act of sabotage. There were no weapons involved, no radio transmitters, no coded messages. It was something stranger and, as it turned out, more effective than any of these things. It was the deliberate removal of time itself from a German garrison that could not function without it.Veldal is a village of two hundred and thirty people on an inner arm of a Vestlandet fjord, surrounded on three sides by mountains that receive their first snow in October. The German garrison that arrives in the summer of 1940 finds nothing suspicious: no weapons caches, no Resistance pamphlets, no obviously subversive activity. They find only that the clocks are gone, and that the villagers explain this by reference to a centuries-old tradition of reading time from the light and the tides, and that no regulation in the occupation's legal framework requires a Norwegian village to keep mechanical clocks on its walls.Hauptmann Werner Brandt, the garrison's commandant, knows something is wrong. His clocks are unreliable. His patrol schedule runs on a timing he cannot fully trust. His morning assemblies happen at times that feel slightly off from the times he intends. The village operates with an ordinariness that is just slightly too consistent to be entirely natural. He cannot prove any of this. He cannot find the mechanism. He cannot close the gap.The gap is exactly where Sigrid Aas, the village schoolteacher who removed the first clock, is working.Over five years, Veldal's temporal manipulation, maintained through watchmaker Torbjorn Vik's precise clock-adjustment technique and the village's genuine four-hundred-year tradition of natural-time navigation, creates a controlled environment in which the garrison never quite knows when it is. The gap between the garrison's believed time and the actual time is where the resistance fighters move. It is where two hundred and thirty transit fighters and couriers pass through on their way through the fjord network. It is where, for six critical weeks in the spring of 1943, fifty Milorg fighters are sheltered while planning the disruption of a German naval logistics depot that reshapes the war in western Norway.Drawing on the documented history of the Norwegian hjemmefronten, the Milorg military resistance organization, the XU intelligence network, and the specific techniques of psychological and environmental resistance employed by Norwegian communities during the occupation, The Clockless Village is a novel about the most invisible weapon any resistance can possess: control over what the enemy believes is real.The clock on the garrison wall was always wrong. The village knew exactly what time it was.Mesmerizing, precise, and quietly devastating. Essential reading for fans of The Snowman by Jo Nesbo, Between the Lines by Jodi Picoult, and All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our Sydney, NSW warehouse or from our UK or US warehouse, depending on stock availability. N° de réf. du vendeur 9798235144637
Quantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Vendeur : CitiRetail, Stevenage, Royaume-Uni
Paperback. Etat : new. Paperback. In April 1940, the Germans invaded Norway. Within the week, a schoolteacher in a remote fjord village removed every clock from every wall.It was not an act of sabotage. There were no weapons involved, no radio transmitters, no coded messages. It was something stranger and, as it turned out, more effective than any of these things. It was the deliberate removal of time itself from a German garrison that could not function without it.Veldal is a village of two hundred and thirty people on an inner arm of a Vestlandet fjord, surrounded on three sides by mountains that receive their first snow in October. The German garrison that arrives in the summer of 1940 finds nothing suspicious: no weapons caches, no Resistance pamphlets, no obviously subversive activity. They find only that the clocks are gone, and that the villagers explain this by reference to a centuries-old tradition of reading time from the light and the tides, and that no regulation in the occupation's legal framework requires a Norwegian village to keep mechanical clocks on its walls.Hauptmann Werner Brandt, the garrison's commandant, knows something is wrong. His clocks are unreliable. His patrol schedule runs on a timing he cannot fully trust. His morning assemblies happen at times that feel slightly off from the times he intends. The village operates with an ordinariness that is just slightly too consistent to be entirely natural. He cannot prove any of this. He cannot find the mechanism. He cannot close the gap.The gap is exactly where Sigrid Aas, the village schoolteacher who removed the first clock, is working.Over five years, Veldal's temporal manipulation, maintained through watchmaker Torbjorn Vik's precise clock-adjustment technique and the village's genuine four-hundred-year tradition of natural-time navigation, creates a controlled environment in which the garrison never quite knows when it is. The gap between the garrison's believed time and the actual time is where the resistance fighters move. It is where two hundred and thirty transit fighters and couriers pass through on their way through the fjord network. It is where, for six critical weeks in the spring of 1943, fifty Milorg fighters are sheltered while planning the disruption of a German naval logistics depot that reshapes the war in western Norway.Drawing on the documented history of the Norwegian hjemmefronten, the Milorg military resistance organization, the XU intelligence network, and the specific techniques of psychological and environmental resistance employed by Norwegian communities during the occupation, The Clockless Village is a novel about the most invisible weapon any resistance can possess: control over what the enemy believes is real.The clock on the garrison wall was always wrong. The village knew exactly what time it was.Mesmerizing, precise, and quietly devastating. Essential reading for fans of The Snowman by Jo Nesbo, Between the Lines by Jodi Picoult, and All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our UK warehouse or from our Australian or US warehouses, depending on stock availability. N° de réf. du vendeur 9798235144637
Quantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Vendeur : preigu, Osnabrück, Allemagne
Taschenbuch. Etat : Neu. THE CLOCKLESS VILLAGE | A Remote Norwegian Village That Removed Every Clock and Calendar, Forcing German Occupiers into Total Disorientation While Hiding 50 Resistance Fighters | Erik Strandvik-Cole | Taschenbuch | Englisch | 2026 | ABDUL AHAD ANSARI | EAN 9798235144637 | Verantwortliche Person für die EU: Libri GmbH, Europaallee 1, 36244 Bad Hersfeld, gpsr[at]libri[dot]de | Anbieter: preigu Print on Demand. N° de réf. du vendeur 135358076
Quantité disponible : 5 disponible(s)