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Prisoners of Nazis: Accounts by American POWs in World War II [Mīkstie vāki]

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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 224 pages, height x width x depth: 229x152x11 mm, weight: 299 g, photos, appendices, index
  • Izdošanas datums: 15-Dec-1997
  • Izdevniecība: McFarland & Co Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0786403489
  • ISBN-13: 9780786403486
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 224 pages, height x width x depth: 229x152x11 mm, weight: 299 g, photos, appendices, index
  • Izdošanas datums: 15-Dec-1997
  • Izdevniecība: McFarland & Co Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0786403489
  • ISBN-13: 9780786403486
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The Nazis called them Kriegsgefangen, a term that the prisoners of war shortened to "Kriegie." The nickname hid the reality for the nearly seven million POWs who were placed in the German camps during World War II. These men consistently faced food shortages, medical needs were often ignored, barracks were barely heated, and personal hygiene was nearly impossible.

Conditions depended on the soldiers who controlled the camp. Regular army guards might withhold clothing and food, but generally did not physically abuse the prisoners. The SS troops administered beatings, torture and murders. In this work, 19 POWs provide a vivid and often poignant look at their treatment by the Germans. The soldiers range from those captured in the D-Day invasion to B-17 crew members shot down during bombing raids.



The Nazis called them Kriegsgefangen, a term that the prisoners of war shortened to “Kriegie.” The nickname hid the reality for the nearly seven million POWs who were placed in the German camps during World War II. These men consistently faced food shortages, medical needs were often ignored, barracks were barely heated, and personal hygiene was nearly impossible. Conditions depended on the soldiers who controlled the camp. Regular army guards might withhold clothing and food, but generally did not physically abuse the prisoners. The SS troops administered beatings, torture and murders. In this work, 19 POWs provide a vivid and often poignant look at their treatment by the Germans. The soldiers range from those captured in the D-Day invasion to B-17 crew members shot down during bombing raids.

Recenzijas

a collection of oral histories of the POW experience in Europe...give[ s] the reader a tour through the horrors of captivity and trumpet the resilience of those who enduredMilitary Review; well-crafted literary mosaic...Spiller has orchestrated 19 highly qualified voices into a symphony which celebrates the triumph of the human spiritThe Stars & Stripes; a very good book with interesting stories. Two valuable appendices are included, one listing the names and locations of the camps which contained Americans and the other describing the German regulations concerning prisoners of warNational Ex-Prisoner of War Association.

Acknowledgments iv
Introduction 1(4)
PART I: THE INVASION OF ITALY 5(38)
Sergeant William C. Bradley
7(20)
Corporal Harold W. Gattung
27(7)
Private First Class John McLaughlin
34(9)
PART II: THE INVASION OF FRANCE 43(26)
Private First Class Adam L. Canupp
45(5)
Private Lawrence E. Roberts
50(5)
Private First Class Johnnie C. Womble
55(5)
Tec/3 John M. Hancock
60(9)
PART III: THE BATTLE OF THE BULGE 69(22)
Corporal Walter B. Young, Jr.
71(6)
Private Walter F. Gurley
77(6)
Sergeant John P. Wilson
83(8)
PART IV: BOMBING RAIDS OVER GERMANY 91(50)
Technical Sergeant Gordon K. Butts
93(15)
2nd Lieutenant Carl W. Remy
108(14)
Sergeant Forest L. Wilmouth
122(7)
Technical Sergeant Claude E. Harper
129(12)
PART V: THE INVASION OF GERMANY 141(38)
Lieutenant Paul H. Smith
143(5)
Private First Class Phil Trapani
148(7)
Private First Class Melvin W. Zerkel
155(9)
Private First Class Arnold F. Franke
164(7)
Corporal Donovan C. Evers
171(8)
Appendix A: Approximate Locations of Prison Camps 179(2)
Appendix B: German Regulations Concerning Prisoners of War 181(32)
Index 213
Harry Spiller is the author of 18 books and numerous magazine articles. He served for 10 years in the U.S. Marine Corps with two tours in Vietnam. He also served as sheriff of Williamson County, Illinois, and retired as an associate professor of criminal justice from John A. Logan College. He lives in Marion, Illinois.