"The Sledge Patrol" is a book I read in order to while away the time on a recent long-haul flight, and it turned out to be a remarkable true-life adventure from WWII, a sideshow in the grand scheme of a conflict in which more than 50 million died, but a human drama to match any.
The book relates the story of the 15 or so men of the North-East Greenland Sledge Patrol, a mixture of Danish, Norwegian and Inuit civilians appointed by the Wartime Danish Governor of Greenland to patrol a remote and almost uninhabited 500-mile stretch of coastline to check for signs of German infiltration. The author explains that whilst the men involved undertook their duties conscientiously, most were initially bemused at the idea the German Army might invade NE Greenland. They were though happy to take a salary from the Government for doing something they would have done for nothing, i.e. travelling up and down the coast by dog sledge; and hunting. To give the men legal status and the (theoretical at least) protection of the Geneva Convention, the Danish Governor even officially designated them "The Greenland Army", something which he himself saw the comic side of. However things got serious in the spring of 1943, when three members of the scattered Sledge Patrol did actually discover Germans in Greenland. This was a party of 19, mainly meteorologists sending weather reports that were valuable to the German U-boat operations in the North Atlantic. This discovery, and the fact the Germans knew they had been discovered, led to clashes between the two sides and a desperate retreat by the Danes, who were armed only with hunting rifles and faced opponents with machine guns and grenades. The subsequent story includes several tales of astonishing human endurance, and for the reader the tension is maintained by the knowledge that this is a true life story and therefore not necessarily subject to a Hollywood-style happy ending.
The story itself is augmented by the author's descriptions of the landscapes and culture of the Artic, which Mr Howarth himself clearly loved. In a land where human survival is so tenuous, the inhabitants had developed a culture of mutual co-operation and sharing, where the idea of humans killing one another was completely alien. Nevertheless, the terrible World War eventually left its footprint even on them. Recommended for anyone with an interest in WWII.