British Soldier and POW Victor Gregg's eyewitness account of the Dresden bombings in February 1945
1. Note of Remembrance
2. Grim Truth
3. Overture to Hell
4. Slaughter of the Innocents
5. Aftermath
6. The General
7. Day Four
8. Day Five
9. Day Six
Afterword: Was this the greatest war crime of all?
A Note on the Authors
Also Available by the Author
Victor Gregg was born in London in 1919 and joined the
army in 1937, serving first in the Rifle Brigade in Palestine and
North Africa, notably at the Battle of Alamein, and then with the
Parachute Regiment, at the Battle of Arnhem. As a prisoner of war
he survived the bombing of Dresden to be repatriated in 1946. The
story of his adult years, Rifleman, was published by Bloomsbury in
2011, the prequel, King’s Cross Kid, in 2013 and the final part of
his trilogy, Soldier, Spy: A Survivor's Tale, in 2016; all were
co-written with Rick Stroud. Victor Gregg died in 2021, aged
102.
Rick Stroud is a writer and television director who has
directed such actors as Pierce Brosnan, John Hurt, Ian Holme, David
Suchet, Celia Imrie and Joanna Lumley. Earlier in his career he was
the associate producer of Brideshead Revisited. He has won an Emmy
and been nominated for a BAFTA. He is the author of The Book of the
Moon and The Phantom Army of Alamein: How the Camouflage Unit and
Operation Bertram Hoodwinked Rommel, and with Victor Gregg has
written Rifleman and King's Cross Kid. He is currently working on a
book about the kidnapping by the SOE of General Kreipe from his
headquarters on Nazi occupied Crete. He lives in London.
Victor Gregg is the most remarkable spokesman for the war
generation. Searingly honest in his appraisal of what that conflict
did to the world, on society and, above all, on himself.
*History Hit*
This is a small but extremely thought-provoking book about the
Allied bombing of Dresden in eastern Germany, written by a soldier
who was a prisoner of war and who was there and whose life, upon
witnessing such horror, was re-evaluated. Whether you think the
bombing was justified (after Coventry had suffered similar) or not,
this is such a moving record written from a soldier's perspective
about his enemies and the suffering that such bombing created.
Read, think and read again.
*Let's Talk*
It is an engaging tale and the author writes with a witty sarcasm
that keeps the narrative flowing.
*Military-History.us*
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