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Alarmstart South and Final Defeat - The German Fighter Pilot's Experience in the Mediterranean Theatre 1941-44 and Normandy, Norway and Germany 1944-45 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R316
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Alarmstart South and Final Defeat - The German Fighter Pilot's Experience in the Mediterranean Theatre 1941-44 and Normandy, Norway and Germany 1944-45 (Paperback)
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List price R346
Loot Price R316
Discovery Miles 3 160
You Save R30 (9%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 17 working days
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Alarmstart South completes Patrick Eriksson's Alarmstart trilogy on
Second World War German fighter pilots, detailing their experiences
in the Mediterranean theatre (1941-1944), and during the closing
stages of the war over Normandy, Norway and Germany (1944-1945). He
utilises extensive personal reminiscences of veterans and original
documents, set within a brief factual framework of campaigns,
equipment and the progress of the war. Veterans who flew in Me 109,
Fw 190 and Me 110/410 aircraft provide their stories in their own
words. They range from junior NCOs to Colonels, including a senior
fighter controller and even one of the Luftwaffe's psychologists.
The Mediterranean theatre provided the top scoring aces on both
sides for the entire war (excluding the Russian front battles):
Hans-Joachim Marseille (158 victory claims) on the German side and
South African 'Pat' Pattle (an estimated 41+), on the Allied side.
In the air battles over the Mediterranean region, many aircrew
ended up 'in the drink' with little chance of being found.
Occasionally, a miracle would happen, as with Dr Felix Sauer of JG
53, a pre-war biology teacher, who used his knowledge of chemistry
and a calm demeanour to survive eight days in a dinghy at sea
without water, apart from rain or dew. For many pilots the war
would end only in death, for others in imprisonment. Oberfeldwebel
Horst Petzschler endured forced labour in southern Russia: 'On 22
September 1949 I arrived in Berlin, my home town, weighing 118
pounds, half dead but having survived!'
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