Why would a dedicated soldier turn his back on his own country and everyone he loves? This remarkable and moving World War II novel takes the reader on a compelling journey from North Africa to Nova Scotia, from New York to Scotland, and ultimately to the extreme dangers of the Russian Arctic convoys. Based on a true story that was given to her father, Charles M Herbert, this is New Zealand author Ann Barrie's first novel.
Covers "November 1942-May 1943" in the Battle of the Atlantic.
For the last four gruelling years of the war, the Western Allies supplied arms and ammunition to Soviet Russia.
The Road to Russia is an important addition to the bibliography of this bitterly fought campaign.
This book is a lasting memory of this extraordinary mission which was a turning point in the defence of Malta and the Mediterranean during World War II and to all those who lost their lives defending the values of freedom and democracy.
Bernard Edwards tells this fascinating story of the convoy that Montsarrat used in three parts, each describing one convoy.
Theodore Taylor, who served in the merchant marines in World War II, tells the tragic tale of a convoy of 33 ships that sailed from Iceland to Russia in an effort to bring the Soviets needed tanks, trucks, airplanes, and ammunition.
This book tells the saga of a German front-line U-Boat, U-I 7S, which, with her compatriots, very nearly severed Britain's lifeline across the Atlantic, and which culminated in a critical battle around Convoy HX-233 in the Spring of 1943.
A chilling story of the Allies' narrow escape from defeat at the hands of Nazi submarines in the North Atlantic.
An account of the World War II Battle of the Atlantic and the vital role played by the men and ships that protected Allied convoys from German submarines.
... keys: The Heimisch key (DOLPHIN at Bletchley Park), which continued to be used by U-boats in the Arctic after those in the Atlantic moved to the four-rotor Triton (SHARK) in February 1942, and a Mediterranean key, PORPOISE, which had ...