This mesmerising book is at once a daughter's search for an understanding of her father and a search to understand - through her father's life - the Czech and Polish experience of the war.
The author's father certainly led a fascinating and frightening life during WW 2 in Poland and German, England and other parts of Europe. Approximately 16 years of age when the war was in its infancy, "Joe" grew up on the run, fighting, having near-death experiences, watching friends die...his life is a revealing testimony to the will to survive that God places within each of us. I DID get bogged down in the details after a couple of hundred pages but that was more due to my own short attention span.
I would have preferred (& likely enjoyed) an excerpt. Joe's story (as told to his daughter), her travels re-tracing his steps and her commentary on the impact his experiences had on their family were all interesting. Unfortunately they were all mired in pages and pages of verbatim speeches, war correspondence and other historical reports which were detailed, dry and (to me) de-railed the story. If I wanted to read a history textbook, I would go back to university. Also the vocabulary was at times cumbersome (potentially because as a Canadian the vernacular is not the same as the British author's) and she utilizes a fair amount of Polish, German and Czech terminology.
Good start and good ending. Middle filled up with personal point of view on Eastern European Twentieth century history - the gist of it being everybody did something bad to the Poles and the Czechs. History is always much more messy and less guilt free. Nonetheless, a very good book to get an alternate look from an Eastern European point of view (except it was written by the daughter of a Czech/Polish immigre who grew up in England. The end does a nice bit about how things are never quite what you think they are.
Highly recommended. Not an easy or fast read, but I learned so so so much. I had no real idea of what happened in Eastern Europe before WWII, of the perfidy of the Allies (Neville Chamberlain, world-class asshat). Buy a copy and take your time with this. Parts of it drag a bit, but the history is well and clearly told, with just enough personal insight and relevance to make it that much more compelling.