At eleven in the morning of April 7, 1926, a woman emerged from the crowd in Piazza del Campidoglio in Rome. Less than one step ahead of it, Mussolini stopped. When lifting the arm to the fascist salute, the woman raised hers and shot him at close range. Mussolini she narrowly escaped injury, the bullet had just grazed him. Encouraged by everyone, could continue the fascist march. This is the amazing untold story of Violet Gibson, the woman who tried to stop the rise of fascism and change the course of history. Violet was arrested, labeled as "mentally ill Irish spinster" and sent to a British mental asylum where he died in 1956.
This elegant work of biographical reconstruction, through a narrative full of suspense, conspiracy and diplomacy, retrieves Gibson notable figure of the lost historical records. From his youth in aristocratic elite of Dublin between debutante balls and...read more