Pathé, British. «London Dr Bone Released After 7 Years In Gaol (videoklipp)». www.britishpathe.com (på engelsk). Besøkt 20. april 2021. «Former communist Dr Edith Bone is back from Hungary after 7 years in gaol. (---) Interviewer: "Do you think the Russians will succeed in imposing their will on Hungary?" Dr Bone: "I don't think so. Of course, I don't think the Hungarians can resist by the force of arms, such immense superiority forces which the Russians possess. On the other hand, I don't believe that a government which is merely the agent of a foreign invader or a foreign conqueror can rule a country against the will of 98 per cent of its population." | Interviewer: "After all the things you have seen, do you still believe communism can bring happiness to the human race?" | Dr Bone: "Alas no! I have seen it bring advantages to a small section, but certainly not happiness to the vast majority of those whom Communism claims to service - the working population!"»
community-languages.org.uk
Steve Cushion. «Edith Bone» (på engelsk). Community Languages. Besøkt 20. april 2021. «She was freed during the last days of the Nagy Government of 1956 when a student group seized control of the political prison where she was held.) She died in 1975 in the UK, it would appear a lonely figure who had buried herself in translation work, including of historically ‘Jewish’ literature.»
Smith, Marc (24. mars 2020). «Lockdown, Isolation & Coping». Medium (på engelsk). Besøkt 20. april 2021. «It’s 1949 and sixty-year-old Edith Bone is working as a freelance journalist in Budapest when she’s picked up by the Hungarian secret police and spirited away to a faceless building somewhere in the city. She’s accused of spying for the British and interrogated for hours. But Edith is a formidable individual and insists that she has nothing to do with any government and is certainly no spy. She becomes frustrated with the incompetence of her interrogators as they gradually realise that they’re fighting a battle they cannot win. Without a trial and having never been given a prisoner identification number, Edith Bone spends the next seven years in solitary confinement.»