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Just released: "To Fight For My Country, Sir!"
Just released: "To Fight For My Country, Sir!"
A memoir of a 19 year old B-17 Navigator shot down in Nazi Germany and imprisoned in the WWII "Great Escape" prison camp.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
(Free-Press-Release.com) March 9, 2010 --
ABOUT THE AUTHOR Donald E. Casey volunteered for the Aviation Cadet program of the U.S. Army Air Corps in December, 1942 at age 18 and was called for active duty in February 1943. On completing aerial navigation school on October 23, 1943 he was commissioned a 2d Lieutenant and was awarded his silver navigator's wings, still age 18 by two weeks. He flew as a navigator in B-17 " Flying Fortress" bombers on 28 combat missions out of England with the 379th Bomb Group of the 8th Air Force until June 18, 1944 when his aircraft was shot down by anti-aircraft fire and he and four crew members survived while the other four were killed in action that day by vengeful civilians on the ground in Hamburg, Germany. Lt. Casey was captured by German soldiers and spent six months in Stalag Luft III (South Compound) the "Great Escape" prison camp in Zagan, Poland with 10,000 captured Allied flying officers. On January 27, 1945 Russian Army troops approached Zagan and were close enough for him and his fellow prisoners to hear the explosions of the cannons from less than 20 miles away. He and his fellow prisoners were evacuated westward under armed guard on foot in a subzero blizzard and via cattle- car train to Stalag VII-A at Moosburg, in Bavaria. He and 110,000 flea-ridden Allied POW's were finally liberated by General George Patton's 3rd Army on April 29, 1945 and rescued amid starvation, exposure and disease.
This is a terrific first person account of a 19 year old B-17 navigator in WORLD WAR TWO , surviving a 23,000 foot free fall and parachute jump only to be captured and imprisoned at the famous "Great Escape" prison camp. The book is a must read for anyone who wants to know what it really felt like to fly combat missions, to be captured and to suffer the rigors of a winter death match under armed guard, to be on an overcrowded cattle car train and transported to the Hell Hole prison at Moosburg, Germany along with 110,000 POW's, eating rancid "soup", fighting dysentery and swarming fleas, starving and finally being rescued by General Patton's Third Army at war's end (includes photo of the General at the camp). It is a riveting story that is hard to put down, written by a great story teller, now a Chicago trial lawyer for 52 years and full of cherished photos.
Where: New Delhi,India
Industry: Business Services

Where: New York,United States
Industry: Business Services
Where: London,United Kingdom
Industry: Business Services
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