The War Dentists British Army Dentists, Dead Spies, and the Secret Registry
Every tooth tells a story. In wartime, that story could save a network or destroy one.
London, September 1939. Major James Aldous Harcourt of the British Army Dental Corps is summoned to a meeting he was not told the subject of, by a colonel who hands him a grey file and a question that will define the next six years of his life: what would it take to build a dental identification registry for people who officially do not exist?
The answer, as Harcourt will discover, is everything he has.
As the Special Operations Executive deploys agents across Occupied Europe, a hidden crisis develops: when those agents die in the field, the intelligence services cannot always confirm who has died, how they died, or what their death means for the networks still operating around them. A body without a confirmed identity is an unanswered question. An unanswered question, in the intelligence world, is a potential catastrophe.
Harcourt builds the Registry. He charters agents' teeth before they deploy. He identifies the dead from photographs smuggled out of France. He examines a German officer in a Hampshire country house whose identity, confirmed in three dental features, will shape an interrogation of historic consequence. He creates a dental profile for a man who never existed, in support of the greatest deception operation of the war. And from a prisoner of war camp in Bavaria, a dental officer sends intelligence home encoded in the clinical notation of his patients' charts.
The teeth, it turns out, are the last honest record of a human life. In wartime, honesty is the most dangerous intelligence of all.
Grounded in the real history of Operation Mincemeat, the SOE, the XX Committee, and the British Army Dental Corps, The War Dentists is a novel about the most unusual front of the Second World War and the most precise.
"The teeth outlast everything. They are the last honest record of a human life. They do not lie, they do not forget, and they cannot be made to say what they did not witness."