New in paperback, the story of MI9, Churchill's secret weapons development unit Praise for `Toyshop' includes: `a hilarious book and certain to amuse even those whose interest in weapons of war is minimal' TLS and `a small piece of secret history', The Yorkshire Post. The inside story of one of the most famous of all the `back rooms' of the Second World War - and of the men and women who worked for it. Conceived by Winston Churchill to circumvent the delays, frustrations and inefficiencies of the service ministries, Department M.D.1. earned from its detractors the soubriquet `Winston Churchill's Toyshop', yet from a tiny underground workshop housed in the cellars of the London offices of Radio Normandie in Portland Place, and subsequently from the `stockbroker Tudor' of a millionaire's country mansion in Buckinghamshire, came an astonishing array of secret weapons ranging from the `sticky bomb' and `limpet mine' to giant bridge- carrying assault tanks, as well as the PIAT, a tank-destroying, hand-held mortar