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2018 - August - WW2 Biography
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'Aussie Rick', Moderator
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Jul 29, 2018 04:44PM

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My Dad, Bill is the principal character as it's his story told by me, although others in the book deserve a look.
Dad only ever survived by breaking the RAF rules, which he was convinced were slanted against the survival of crews. Mostly created by armchair bureaucrats and powerful aristocrats.
Against all odds Bill married my mother to be, survived the war physically but not mentally, and only ever spoke about his wartime experiences to me. His only son.
Since publication in 2011 the book has been reprinted twice, and banned by the Beenleigh and District RSL Branch (my own home town) due to being too anti-establishment, and not Rah, Rah, enough - they said.
I see that I have many thousands of characters left to post - but am unsure what else to say at this time.
Thank you for the opportunity for more readers to enjoy the story.
Nil bastardi carberandum! (Don't let the bastards grind you down!)
LEST WE FORGET!




As long as its a biography set in WW2 why not :)

I've got to go looking for that one - especially if it was not received by the "establishment".



http://www.smashwords.com/books/view/...
'Aussie Rick' wrote: "For those interested here is the book John is referring to in regards to his father's wartime service:

TheIron wrote: "John wrote: "Should the rules allow, I'd like to table my book 'RELUCTANT RERO' - a true story about my Dad, Bill, who served and survived as an RAF Lancaster Bomber pilot, when 55,000 (approx.) fe..."


This is Wing Commander Neil's story. He passed away about 2 weeks ago, age 97.



Hopefully it'll break my run of bad luck with this sort of thing...


I'm interested to know how this one turns out. It's been on my "to-read" list for a bit.
I won't be joining in on this group-read as I just started a Napoleon biography.

George Beurling (1921-1948) was Canada's top fighter ace of the Second World War, as well as a phenomenon among fighter pilots in the war. He began his combat service with the RAF in 1941 and served on the Channel Front flying sweeps over France for several months. During that time, he shot down 2 German fighters. Beurling chafed under the strictures of standard flight discipline and became unpopular with his superiors and fellow pilots.
In the late spring of 1942, an opportunity presented itself for overseas service, and Beurling took it. He arrived on the besieged Mediterranean island of Malta on June 9, following a long flight in a Spitfire from the carrier HMS Eagle.
Malta was where Beurling, who was already a highly skilled pilot and master shot, really came into his own. By the time he returned to the UK late in October 1942, Beurling was credited with shooting down 27 German and Italian aircraft - most of them fighters. One of his achievements unrivalled in the war was his shooting down of a Messerschmitt 109 over Malta from a distance of 800 yards. (That's almost half a mile!)
Beurling survived the war, but was restless in the early postwar years. Then in 1948, he was offered the opportunity to fly fighters for the nascent Israeli Air Force. Unfortunately, he died in a fiery plane crash in Rome on May 20th of that year under mysterious circumstances. He was 26 years old.
I first read about Beurling almost 40 years ago. He is a fascinating character.



Picked up a copy.


https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1...
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/4...


https://www.amazon.com/Unlikely-Warri......
From the letters I (editor and translator) receive, many readers are surprised and intrigued by getting to read a book which features a hero "from the other side" They write me "I thought all German
soldiers were Nazis." Far from it. While Georg's partly Jewish mother was risking her life to hide Jewish friends behind false walls in their Viennese apartment, young Georg Rauch was helping her by selling
valuables on the black market. Also he helped to assure his survival
in the Russian front by learning to cook, Morse code, building radios,
and even playing the harmonica. If you also thought that anyone with a drop of Jewish blood was sent to the death camps, I also recommend the books by Bryan Riggs beginning with Hitler's Jewish Soldiers. Georg's is not a heavy book, or academic. He was a clever and inventive kid, with lots of street smarts. The book is partly based on the letters he wrote home to his mother from Russia. As many times as I have read it I still cry, laugh, and am on the edge of
my seat, hoping he will make it home from safely and find his family still alive. I hope you will enjoy it as much as I enoyed being the
wife of this incredible artist for 40 years.









Read The Trail Of The Fox while in college in 1983. Fantastic book.


While an interesting book (it's obviously a full life that Ned lived), I can't help but think, as I do with most such books "there must be more to it than that". Still, it's put a few more thoughts on the to buy list for down the way...


Sounds like a good primer for some more in-depth reading Jonny. Sad that he had to sell his medals to make ends meet, that's just not right!


and really need to pick up Paddy Ashdown's

The original

was good but a bit dated.
Bill Sparks:
http://www.canveyisland.org/page_id__...
https://www.theguardian.com/news/2002...
The first link also has the rather nice BBC documentary on Operation Frankton. And Bill's "chariot":
https://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/it...


Here's a lavish biography, replete with lots of photos, of one of the Luftwaffe's most remarkable fighter pilots. Were Marseille born a decade later than he was, he would in all likelihood be regarded as a beatnik, for he was a bit of a bohemian, with a love of jazz music (which the Nazis despised), and a flare for living life to the full.
The great Luftwaffe ace and General of the Fighter Ace Adolf Galland regarded Marseille as "the virtuoso among fighter pilots." His flying skills amazed even the most jaded and war-weary Luftwaffe fighter pilot, and his exceptional shooting ability inspired awe. Of the 158 victories Marseille scored against the Western Allies, 151 were achieved in the skies over North Africa. Indeed, during the course of 1 day - September 1, 1942 - Marseille shot down 17 enemy planes.

[bookcover:Operation Suicide: The Remarkable Story of the Cockleshell Raid|13..."
I think I have a copy of "Operation Suicide: The Remarkable Story of the Cockleshell Raid" but I will have to conduct a search to make sure :)



[bookcover:German Fighter Ace Hans-Joachim Marseille: The Life Sto..."
Many people think my book on Marseille is better, perhaps because as I wrote it with Anne, I referred to not just the records, but the dozens of interviews I conducted with the pilots and others who knew and fought with Marseille. I wanted it "in their own words" so to speak as they witnessed his life.
https://www.amazon.com/Star-Africa-Co...


https://www.warhistoryonline.com/revi...
502nd Heavy Panzer Battalion:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/502nd_H...

http://www.axishistory.com/axis-natio...
https://warthunder.com/en/news/2806--en
My next chapter details the author's involvement in Operation Zitadelle.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yuOCy...

Kurt Knispel:
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/1...


Some Americans my be unfamiliar with Joyce. He was Britain's equivalent to Axis Sally or Tokyo Rose. A British fascist, Joyce spent the war making propaganda broadcasts from Berlin directed against Britain. Unlike Axis Sally or Tokyo Rose, he went to the gallows as a traitor although some controversy exists concerning his status as a British subject.

I only know Lord Haw-Haw from comic books--was it Sgt Rock? Can't quite recall.



I only know Lord Haw-Haw from comic books--was it Sgt Rock? Can't qui..."
I was a huge fan of Sgt. Rock. Much more than Sgt. Fury. Really liked the Star-Spangled War Stories.
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