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Days of Victory: Canadians Remember, 1939-1945

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On May 4, 1945, Canadian artillery captain David Francis found himself near the village of Otterloo, Holland. Shell fire on both sides had diminished noticeably. Both sides tried to avoid last minute casualties. That night, the eve of Dutch liberation, the quartermaster arranged a party for the troops. "The local citizenry were also invited," Francis recalled. "At the height of the party news came over the radio of the surrender of the German forces in Holland ... The loud resulting cheers were suddenly hushed as all the Dutch people present stood and, with tears streaming down their cheeks, sang their national anthem, and sang it again, and yet again ... as these normally undemonstrative Dutch people gave vent to their pent-up emotions and the realization sank in that they were free at last of the Nazi yoke." When the German capitulation in Europe came on May 8 -- VE Day -- celebrations swept the continent. Festivities also spilled into the streets of Halifax, Ottawa, Sudbury, Regina and Vancouver back home. Both the liberators and the liberated erupted in fits of cheers and singing, tears and hugging, dancing, praying, flag-waving, bonfires, parades, and every other demonstration of delight imaginable. It was, to be sure, a sweet day and a bitter one for millions of people whose lives had been changed forever by nearly six years of global war. This day, and the long days of war that led to it, come to life in Days of 60th Anniversary Edition. This volume of wartime remembrance carries the reader from the early days the Second World War -- when Canadians in combat experienced more trials than triumphs ... when those on the homefront endured rationing, yearning and tremendous social upheaval ... where, beyond the wire of POW camps, prisoners (Allied and German) masterminded and executed escapes ... and where so-called "aliens" inside Canadian internment camps fought to prove their loyalty. Ultimately, the book offers the voices of the Canadians' ultimate march to victory that began on D-Day in 1944 and culminated in VE and VJ Day, more than a year later. Contained here are the stories of average volunteers, some of whom became well known after the war -- including war correspondents Ross Munro, Matthew Halton and J.D. MacFarlane; broadcasters Marcel Ouimet, Art Cole and Clyde Gilmour; seamen Dave Broadfoot, Murray Westgate and Scott Young; air crew Buzz Beurling, Marion Orr and Phil Marchaldon; and army troops James Doohan and Barney Danson as well as homegrown entertainers such as Fred Davis, Alan and Blanche Lund, Murray Ginsberg, Victor Feldbrill, Robert Goodier and comedians Wayne and Shuster. From interviews, research and images originally gathered by father and son writing team -- Alex and Ted Barris -- best-selling author Ted Barris has broadened the initial manuscript to include stories of Canadian heroism in the Pacific war, accounts of Canadian war correspondents battling to beat the censors, more first-hand impressions of the Canadians who liberated Europe and from the civilians they liberated in Italy, France, Belgium, Denmark and finally Holland. On the eve of the 60th anniversary of European liberation this book gives voice to perhaps Canada's greatest generation, those who gave the world a second chance. The "Days of Victory" is enhanced by 32 pages of personal/archival photographs and maps.

414 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1996

32 people want to read

About the author

Ted Barris

25 books39 followers

Ted Barris is an accomplished author, journalist and broadcaster. As well as hosting stints on CBC Radio and regular contributions to The Globe and Mail, the National Post, and various national magazines, he is a full-time professor of journalism at Centennial College in Toronto. Barris has authored seventeen non-fiction books, including the national bestsellers Victory at Vimy and Juno.

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Huguette Larochelle.
685 reviews4 followers
November 1, 2019
a Canadian story of War. wow Sudbury is mentioned , the end of war celebration , wen really crazy braking everything , coming from war and violence erupt to celebrate were the logic in that.June 6, 1944.
Profile Image for Stephen Bedard.
595 reviews7 followers
January 16, 2026
I really enjoyed this book. It gives all sorts of "behind the scenes" pictures of Canada's experience during and right after the Second World War. It opened my eyes to new aspects of this era.
146 reviews1 follower
May 28, 2021
My friend Laurie found this at a yard sale and thought I'd like to read it. A collection of personal recollections of WWII. Interesting perspective.
Profile Image for Marko Van Tol.
10 reviews
February 19, 2009
bundle of stories from veterans from the canadian armed forces who fought in Europe during world war two.
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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