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The Sea, War and Barbed Wire: A Story of Merchant Navy Men
Coles
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The Sea, War and Barbed Wire: A Story of Merchant Navy Men in Ottawa, ON
By None
Current price: $41.95


By None
The Sea, War and Barbed Wire: A Story of Merchant Navy Men in Ottawa, ON
Current price: $41.95
Loading Inventory...
Size: Hardcover
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
This is the fascinating story of Captain Stanley Algar, an oil tanker master. Captured in the Atlantic, he and his colleagues spent four years behind barbed wire. This book, partly based on his diaries (which were hidden from the Germans), tells how the prisoners survived, confronted starvation, and reacted to camp life and German propaganda.
A graphic account of their liberation (written as it happened) is included and the role of the U-boats and the merchant raider vessels and their commanders is also discussed.
Many other aspects of the war, including the role of the BBC, the German attempt to persuade some prisoners to change sides, and enemy propaganda, are considered.
How did the prisoners know what was going on in the war, and why was their information so accurate? What was their relationship with the guards? What correspondence with home was allowed?
All of this is investigated within, and there is also a discussion of the Nuremberg trials and the appalling cost of the war. Finally, there are many pen portraits of international leaders and ‘ordinary’ men propelled into another conflict after ‘the war to end all wars’ had been concluded.
This is the fascinating story of Captain Stanley Algar, an oil tanker master. Captured in the Atlantic, he and his colleagues spent four years behind barbed wire. This book, partly based on his diaries (which were hidden from the Germans), tells how the prisoners survived, confronted starvation, and reacted to camp life and German propaganda.
A graphic account of their liberation (written as it happened) is included and the role of the U-boats and the merchant raider vessels and their commanders is also discussed.
Many other aspects of the war, including the role of the BBC, the German attempt to persuade some prisoners to change sides, and enemy propaganda, are considered.
How did the prisoners know what was going on in the war, and why was their information so accurate? What was their relationship with the guards? What correspondence with home was allowed?
All of this is investigated within, and there is also a discussion of the Nuremberg trials and the appalling cost of the war. Finally, there are many pen portraits of international leaders and ‘ordinary’ men propelled into another conflict after ‘the war to end all wars’ had been concluded.


















