The compelling, previously unknown story of the wartime adventures of Bob Allen: pilot, aerial photographer and prisoner of war.

After a lifetime in the RAF, Group Captain Bob Allen, finally allowed his children and grandchildren to see his official flying log. It contained the line: 'KILLED WHILST ON OPERATIONS'. He refused to answer any further questions, leaving instead a memoir of his life during World War II.

Joining up aged 19, within six months he was in No.1 Squadron flying a Hurricane in a dog fight over the Channel. For almost two years he lived in West Africa, fighting Germany's Vichy French allies, as well as protecting the Southern Atlantic supply routes. Returning home at Christmas 1942, he retrained as a fighter-bomber pilot flying Typhoons and was one of the first over the Normandy beaches on D-Day.

On 25 July 1944 Bob was shot down, spending the rest of the war in a POW camp where he was held in solitary confinement, interrogated by the Gestapo and imprisoned in the infamous Stalag Luft 3 and suffered the winter march of 1945 before being liberated by the Russians.

Fleshing out Bob's careful third-person memoir with detailed research, his daughter Suzanne Campbell Jones tells the gripping story of a more or less ordinary man, who came home with extraordinary memories which he kept to himself for more than 50 years.

Les mer
The compelling, previously unknown story of the wartime adventures of Bob Allen: pilot, aerial photographer and prisoner of war – a remarkable man who had served his country across the world from Africa to Europe during World War II.
Les mer

Foreword

Prologue
1 Head in the air
2 Overseas
3 At war in West Africa
4 Eyes in the sky
5 This island home
6 Summer in France
7 Behind the lines
8 A prisoner in Germany
9 ‘Raus raus’ – ‘out out’
10 Last lap to freedom

Postscript: What happened next
Notes
Select bibliography
Acknowledgements
Index

Les mer
The compelling, previously unknown story of the wartime adventures of Bob Allen: pilot, aerial photographer and prisoner of war – a remarkable man who had served his country across the world from Africa to Europe during World War II.
Les mer
A winning combination of memoir with detailed third-party research, this book tells the never-before-told story of a courageous World War II pilot.

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781472828279
Publisert
2018-03-09
Utgiver
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Vekt
620 gr
Høyde
236 mm
Bredde
158 mm
Dybde
32 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
320

Biografisk notat

For most of her working life Suzanne Campbell Jones has been a film director, writing and producing documentaries for television. These include Battle for Britain a 75-minute documentary for ITV to commemorate the 50th anniversary of that event.

Suzanne started out as an anthropologist and her Ph.D about communities of Roman Catholic nuns was published as In Habit. While writing No Ordinary Pilot she has researched archives in Britain and abroad: visited grass airfields in Normandy, met the curators of the Sagan Museum in Poland, followed the path of prisoners on the run in Germany and sought to fill the gaps in the source – her father's memoir.