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Secret Letters - A Battle of Britain Love Story (Hardcover)
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Secret Letters - A Battle of Britain Love Story (Hardcover)
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This is a unique book. Using for the first time the full
unpublished letters of Pilot Officer Geoffrey Myers it offers a
fresh and distinctive insight into World War 2. While Geoffrey
Myers was a caught up in the major turning points of the early
years of that war - the Battle for France, Dunkirk and the Battle
of Britain - his French wife and two half-Jewish children were
trapped in Nazi-occupied France, desperate to escape the enemy and
be reunited with her husband in England. These secret letters were
never posted and never read by Geoffrey's family until later in the
war. They were designed to be read if he was killed. They begin,
'Three months now, and I have kept silent. I have been hoping to
write letters that would reach you. I have been wanting to do
something that would help you to escape from Occupied France and to
get us all out of this living grave.' Contemporary personal
accounts of the Battle of Britain of such frankness are extremely
rare. Individual narratives on this scale, encompassing two of the
great turning points of the war, the Battle of Britain and Dunkirk,
and much else besides, just do not exist. So the letters from
Geoffrey Myers to his family are unique, offering an original
insight from a witness to so much history. More than that, the
letters tell a powerful love story between two people caught up in
war, and at real risk of never seeing each other again. As a Daily
Telegraph journalist before the war, Geoffrey Myers writes with
eloquence and insight and, because his notebooks were not designed
to be published, the letters are an unvarnished, sometimes brutal,
portrayal of war as his Battle of Britain Squadron suffers terrible
losses. As an Intelligence Officer, Geoffrey was well placed to
understand the chaos all around him but his letters are shot
through with humanity, and sometimes humour. While Geoffrey wrote
his account of the war for his children to read if he survived, his
family were in mortal danger. As a Jew he understood only too well
what would happen if the Nazis discovered his children hiding in
Occupied France. For months he had no idea if his family were dead
or alive, free or imprisoned. His letters reflect his deep love for
his wife, Margot, and children and his acute anxiety for their
safety, as they try to escape the tightening net of the Nazis and
head south through France and Spain. Unique interviews with his
wife offer insight into her remarkable story during those
precarious months. This moving story of a couple whose love is
caught in the crossfire of war is a powerful and rare portrait of,
not only the turbulent events of those times, but also how a family
survives with so much death and danger swirling around them both.
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