A collaborationist who fought for Germany during WWII and later for the French in Vietnam tells his eventful life story in this military memoir. This is the riveting true story of Paul Martelli who fought on the Eastern Front in 1945 as a fifteen-year-old member of the 33rd Waffen-Grenadier-Division of the SS Charlemagne, and later, as a soldier with French forces in the Tonkin area of Vietnam. Paul recounts his time at the Sennheim military training base; his experience of the German invasion of France when he was still a boy in Lorraine; and his motivations for enlisting with the Waffen SS a few years later. He reveals his escapades at Greifenberg, his first love with a German girl helping refugees, and his experiences of combat. After the German defeat, Martelli ends up delivering a group of female camp prisoners to a Russian officer, then living in disguise among enemy soldiers until he escapes and surrenders to the Americans. After a prison sentence and military service in Morocco, Paul is sent to fight in defense of French bases north of Hanoi, Vietnam. Though he survives three years of fierce combat, he compares his service in the Waffen SS with the inefficiency of the French Expeditionary Force and comes out deeply frustrated. At almost twenty-six, Martelli has fought and lost in two wars, both against the communists. Unemployed, and with the ideals of a ‘Nouvelle Europe’ in pieces, he briefly joins the French Foreign Legion before choosing another path
Interesting story of a French teen (that joined the German military in the last couple years of the war. He needed a job, saw a recruitment poster, and joined up. He ended up in the SS, however, the part of the SS he was a part of was a combat unit. He was not directly involved in the holocaust. He did not get an SS tattoo as many other members did. He was one of the youngest members of his unit. He worked on a mortar team and ended up on the front lines against the Russians as they invaded Germany. His combat time and time as Germany was collapsing around him as he retreated from the Russians is one of the high points of the book.
He ended up surrendering, being sent back to France, and then put on trial for collaborating. He was sentenced to prison until he turned the age of majority (18). With his training and his record he found it difficult to get a job. He ended up joining the French military and ended up in Vietnam fighting the communists there. While the author lives a very interesting life, and he was a skilled combat veteran, he struggled with anger issues and the propensity to solve issues with other people using violence. These traits are helpful on the battlefield but would not be acceptable in most modern military organizations. An interesting story though it ends abruptly after his return to France from Vietnam.
This book is entertaining but it is not historically correct it is fiction. You may not notice it at first but about halfway into the book all of the cliches added up and I felt compelled to make an account on Goodreads so people are not deceived. I am so tired of some war memoirs that are not real and hocked off as they are by hacks. it is a true Injustice to the people that actually served. I mean the character is basically an action hero, he's a Deadshot Marksman I swear he kills like 30 people in a day, they capture spies, he blows up a tank single-handedly. he's eating sausage when they're being shelled by artillery for the very first time. There's more than four occasions where he leaves something like a bag and there's apparently Russians like everywhere and he's " cover me I left my things." None of these things are suspect by themselves but they all add up and you realize you are being duped. Scholars have researched a lot of the historical accuracy of this book and it is incorrect.
Wow, Martelli was one tough dude, with a steel trap memory! Amazing stories of combat from the time he joined a French SS regiment (at 15), through his years in Indochina with the French Army. His story ends at 25, when he pasted up a posting with the Foreign Legion, and I would have liked to have known more about his later life.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
I bought this book after reading multiple positive reviews, but to say I was disappointed would be a massive understatement. I honestly don't know how you come away from reading this saying it was good. So here we go, in my opinion;
The book was poorly written, or very poorly translated into English, or both. The reasons for a French teenager joining the Waffen SS are woefully lacking in any substance that a reasonable reader can understand. The story was jumbled and hard to follow, and some of the supposedly verbatim conversations were nonsensical / unbelievable. For instance; 1) Whilst supposedly under Russian attack and with his partner calling for more charges our intrepid hero Mr. MARTELLI supposedly says "Here they come... would you like another sausage?..........He too was having fun, real fun". 2) Whilst under another attack he says ""This reminds me of when I was a kid playing soldiers" I shouted between blasts."". He then gets handed more hand grenades ""After you" I replied nonchalantly. I was having fun, great fun."" 3) You guessed it, whilst again under attack he finds a novel reason to head back to his abandoned position; "" Let's go!" I answered with confidence. "There's still some chicken left at our emplacement. I don't like the idea of those Popovs devouring everything.""
I mean really? How ridiculous and stupid.
Also plenty of mentions of supposed massacres of civilians by marauding allied fighter planes, and how well the Germans treated everyone. Comes across as a propaganda piece.
After more jumbled and badly explained movements MARTELLI ends up in Vietnam where he seems to be a loose cannon getting into multiple brawls with other people. If we are to believe MARTELLI he supposedly takes on about 5 opponents on multiple occasions and leaves them in a bloody heap, ie "I suddenly launched myself forward, arms flailing and feet flying......it didn't take long before all five of them were on the floor".
This a well written tale of an ambitious young man in a difficult time during WWII and beyond. An inside look at the non- German forces inside the axis and how they were treated.