Includes bibliographical references (pages 267-270) and index
Contents:
Machine generated contents note: 1. Barbed Wire Horizon -- 2. Trial and Error -- 3. The Wire -- 4. Short Circuit -- 5. Diversions -- 6.B̀ig X' -- 7. Operation Timber -- 8. Practice Makes Perfect -- 9. The Road Less Travelled -- 10. Pack Up Your Troubles -- 11. Fifteen Yards to Freedom -- 12. Zero Night -- 13.Ànother British Evacuation' -- 14.A Walk in the Woods -- 15.H̀ande hoch!' -- 16. The Bitter Road -- 17. Three Blind Mice -- 18.Comet Line -- 19. The Last Frontier
Summary:
Oflag VI-B, Warburg, Germany: On the night of 30 August 1942 - 'Zero Night' - 40 officers from Britain, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa staged the most audacious mass escape of the Second World War. It was the first 'Great Escape' but instead of tunnelling, the escapers boldly went over the huge perimeter fences using wooden scaling contraptions. This was the notorious 'Warburg Wire Job', described by fellow prisoner and fighter ace Douglas Bader as 'the most brilliant escape conception of this war'. Months of meticulous planning and secret training hung in the balance during three minutes of mayhem as prisoners charged the camp's double perimeter fences. Telling this remarkable story in full for the first time, historian Mark Felton brilliantly evokes the suspense of the escape itself and the adventures of those who eluded the Germans, as well as the courage of the civilians who risked their lives to help them in enemy territory. Fantastically intimate and told with a novelist's eye for drama and detail, this is a rip-roaring adventure story, all the more thrilling for being true
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