Sybil Oldfield is half German and half English; her German grandmother was placed under de facto Schreibverbot during the Nazi dictatorship. Oldfield is an Emeritus Reader in English at the University of Sussex and a researcher for The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. She has campaigned for the anti-war movement since the 1960s.
'This meticulous account ... demonstrates not only the passionate anti-fascist resistance in Britain but yet again the incredible richness of culture, science and education brought by the refugees ... Oldfield's conclusion comes in the form of an unanswerable and unsettling question: would we today, in modern Britain, champion the rights these people fought for with the same doggedness and courage?' - Caroline Moorehead 'A fascinating book ... it serves as a timely reminder of the dangers of intolerance and the politics of hate' - Daily Express 'Oldfield's thoroughly researched and fascinating historical biography explores the lives of many of the 2,600 citizens who attracted Hitler's ire, ranging from high-profile entertainers and writers to those naturalised refugees who doggedly resisted the Nazis from afar' - Observer 'Fascinating ... It is as though someone compiled an edition of the Dictionary of National Biography for the year 1940 with the qualification for each entry being that the Nazis hated them' - Robert Hutton 'A veritable who's who of the people who tried to sound the alarm about the Nazi threat, fight fascism and assist the imperiled Jews of Germany and Austria ... From art historians to musicologists, political thinkers to scientists and classists, [Oldfield demonstrates] the wider contribution that the refugees from Nazism listed in the Black Book made to their adopted country' - Robert Philpot