Please note: In order to keep Hive up to date and provide users with the best features, we are no longer able to fully support Internet Explorer. The site is still available to you, however some sections of the site may appear broken. We would encourage you to move to a more modern browser like Firefox, Edge or Chrome in order to experience the site fully.

Do the birds still sing in Hell?, Paperback / softback Book

Do the birds still sing in Hell? Paperback / softback

Paperback / softback

Description

Horace 'Jim' Greasley was twenty years of age in the spring of 1939 when Adolf Hitler invaded Czechoslovakia and latterly Poland.

There had been whispers and murmurs of discontent from certain quarters and the British government began to prepare for the inevitable war.

After seven weeks training with the 2nd/5th Battalion Leicester, he found himself facing the might of the German army in a muddy field south of Cherbourg, in Northern France, with just thirty rounds of ammunition in his weapon pouch.

Horace's war didn't last long. He was taken prisoner on 25th May 1940 and forced to endure a ten week march across France and Belgium en-route to Holland.

Horace survived...barely...food was scarce; he took nourishment from dandelion leaves, small insects and occasionally a secret food package from a sympathetic villager, and drank rain water from ditches.

Many of his fellow comrades were not so fortunate. Falling by the side of the road through sheer exhaustion and malnourishment meant a bullet through the back of the head and the corpse left to rot.

After a three day train journey without food and water, Horace found himself incarcerated in a prison camp in Poland. It was there he embarked on an incredible love affair with a German girl interpreting for his captors.

He experienced the sweet taste of freedom each time he escaped to see her, yet incredibly he made his way back into the camp each time, sometimes two, three times every week.

Horace broke out of the camp then crept back in again under the cover of darkness after his natural urges were fulfilled.

He brought food back to his fellow prisoners to supplement their meagre rations.

He broke out of the camp over two hundred times and towards the end of the war even managed to bring radio parts back in.

The BBC news would be delivered daily to over 3,000 prisoners.

This is an incredible tale of one man's adversity and defiance of the German nation.

Information

Save 14%

£8.99

£7.69

Item not Available
 
Free Home Delivery

on all orders

 
Pick up orders

from local bookshops

Information