Derek Bond is better remembered as an actor then a soldier and certainly deserves a measure of immortality for his portrayal of Nicolas Nickleby. His career as an actor, however, was very much in its infancy when Hitler invaded poland, and Bond abandon the boards for the drill square. His height naturally propelled him towards the Brigade of Guards and he was soon bulling his boots with the best of them. Though his background was not such as is normally associated with Officers in the Brigade, he was judged to be Officer material, commissioned into the Grenadier Guards and posted to the Third Battalion. More intensive training followed before the Battalion was sent to North Africa invalided home, earning an MC for his pains. Recuperation was followed by a spell as an instructor before he was reunited with the Third Batalion in italy. An unlucky swan into Florence, which he had mistakenly been led to believe the Germans has evacuated, resulted in his capture and he spent the rest of the war as a prisoner. This is not a book which sets out to expound the glories of war, nor does the author pretend that these were the best years of his life. He wrote it, as he says, because so many of his younger friends, to whom the war is a matter of history rather then memory, kept asking him what it was like. Whatever the reason, he tells the story of his military career with a degree of charm, wit and modesty which will come as no surprise to those familiar with the work of this highly talented actor- and writer.
The old man and the sea
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Bill Armitage walked along the beach, staring out at Puget Sound. He loved taking this walk in the morning, and he'd been doing it nearly every day at six for over a month. He always scanned the Sound for the sight of black dorsal fins, ...
Collects Old Man Quill #1-6.
Phil, although sorely tempted to give the old man the bloody good hiding he deserved, had released his grip. Steady Phil bach! Steady! But how furiously was his anger boiling in his breast! All the frustrations and indignities of the ...
First published in 1952, this hugely popular tale confirmed his power and presence in the literary world and played a large part in his winning the 1954 Nobel Prize in Literature.
This book follows the journey that Eugene Pota undertakes as he sifts through the detritus of his life in an effort to settle on the subject of his final work.
From London WWI archives to the battlefields in France to the fjords of Iceland, Tristan races to piece together the story behind the unclaimed riches: a reckless love affair pursued only days before Ashley’s deployment to the Western ...
Reproduction of the original: No Man’s Land by H.C. McNeile
This book will make you feel like seizing the day- and the seas- as David B. Clarinet Clark did time and time again. His legacy is still being created as he resides in California with his wife and dog, Precious.