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2 matches in All Departments
Plucked from every background, and led by an N.K.V.D. Major, the
new recruits who boarded a train in Moscow on 16th October 1941 to
go to war had much in common with millions of others across the
world. What made the 586th Fighter Regiment, the 587th Heavy-bomber
Regiment and the 588th Regiment of light night-bombers unique was
their gender: the Soviet Union was creating the first all-female
active combat units in modern history. Drawing on original
interviews with surviving airwomen, Lyuba Vinogradova weaves
together the untold stories of the female Soviet fighter pilots of
the Second World War. From that first train journey to the last
tragic disappearance, Vinogradova's panoramic account of these
women's lives follows them from society balls to unmarked graves,
from landmark victories to the horrors of Stalingrad. Battling not
just fearsome Aces of the Luftwaffe but also patronising prejudice
from their own leaders, women such as Lilya Litvyak and Ekaterina
Budanova are brought to life by the diaries and recollections of
those who knew them, and who watched them live, love, fight and
die.
"Lyuba Vinogradova is a historian with a writer's dramatic eye. By
personally interviewing many of the Russian women who as teenagers
during WW2 took up arms to defend the motherland, her story becomes
undeniably poignant and powerful" MARTIN CRUZ SMITH, author of
Gorky Park The girls came from every corner of the U.S.S.R. They
were factory workers, domestic servants, teachers and clerks, and
few were older than twenty. Though many had led hard lives before
the war, nothing could have prepared them for the brutal facts of
their new existence: with their country on its knees, and millions
of its men already dead, grievously wounded or in captivity, from
1942 onwards thousands of Soviet women were trained as snipers.
Thrown into the midst of some of the fiercest fighting of the
Second World War they would soon learn what it was like to spend
hour upon hour hunting German soldiers in the bleak expanses of
no-man's-land; they would become familiar with the awful power that
comes with taking another person's life; and in turn they would
discover how it feels to see your closest friends torn away from
you by an enemy shell or bullet. In a narrative that travels from
the sinister catacombs beneath the Kerch Peninsula to Byelorussia's
primeval forests and, finally, to the smoking ruins of the Third
Reich, Lyuba Vinogradova recounts the untold stories of these brave
young women. Drawing on diaries, letters and interviews with
survivors, as well as previously unpublished material from the
military archives, she offers a moving and unforgettable record of
their experiences: the rigorous training, the squalid living
quarters, the blood and chaos of the Eastern Front, and those
moments of laughter and happiness that occasionally allowed the
girls to forget, for a second or two, their horrifying
circumstances. Avenging Angels is a masterful account of an
all-too-often overlooked chapter of history, and an unparalleled
account of these women's lives. Translated from the Russian by Arch
Tait
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