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Bomber Boys

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Three weeks after Stirling air gunner Doug Fry was reported missing over Germany his mother was still clinging to the vain hope that he was alive.

Then a neighbor said she had seen him in the cinema just down the road. The airman and his crew had been filmed for a Bomber Command documentary shortly before they took off from Mildenhall to attack Remscheid. Three hours later four of the crew were killed, but it was another two months after she had also seen the poignant film that widowed mother of eight Winnie Fry knew her nineteen-year-old son, though wounded, was still alive.

Lancaster pilot Victor Wood’s aircraft arrived too early over Gelsenkirchen when the target was shrouded in darkness and the Main Force was miles behind. His 12 Squadron bomber was suddenly struck with terrifying force by flak and turned upside-down. An engine was on fire, the unconscious mid-upper gunner, slumped in his turret, was being sprayed with petrol and their bomb-load had been struck by shrapnel. Could Vic Wood get his crew back to base safely?

These are just two of twenty dramatic stories from Bomber Command by Mel Rolfe, which is contained in Bomber Boys.

Night after night, the young men, some just out of school, went off on sorties, having pushed to the back of their minds the unpalatable awareness that they might never see another dawn. If death did not find them on the first few terrifying sorties they grew up very quickly in order to fight another day.

256 pages, Hardcover

First published August 30, 2004

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Mel Rolfe

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Lesley.
72 reviews1 follower
March 16, 2018
I have a strange fascination for "true" stories and this book did not fail. Recounting the horror of war direct from those involved left me felling grateful and humble.
This book should be on the must read list for our younger generation, who all to quickly, appear tone loosing the understanding of just how much their Great Grandparents gave up for them.
It is a graphic account, from a perspective I had never really thought of before. I felt the vulnerability of the gunner crew, isolated in their rear/upper turrets, fighting the coldness of the dark skies as well as German fighter pilots and truly wish I could meet them, shake them by the had, buy them a beer or two and above all else, say "Thank you"
Profile Image for Peter.
193 reviews9 followers
July 14, 2011
Real words, from real men of real courage.
2 reviews1 follower
January 5, 2019
This book tells the hardships and challenges that the air bomber crew experienced in World War 2. In here some soldiers experienced a malfunctioning equipment in their aircraft which almost led to their deaths. Some experienced the terror of an incoming flak of the enemy. Some planes almost crashed before they can fully fly. Some become POW. This book presented the terrors that I can’t imagine, and I don’t want to experience in my lifetime.

This book is about the many young men and women who fought in the War. Although there are also experienced ones, the youngest age that was told in the book was 19 which is young in today’s standard.

This book is about the death of the innocent. War does not exclusively happen in the battlefield. It happened on the whole country, the citizens, the children, the innocents. The bomber also targets the factories that supplies or support the war.

Technically, this book is heavy on WW2 jargon and will be a hard read and confusing if you are new to WW2 terms. So I would suggest to keep noting the terms, at least in the first 3 chapters, and searching their meaning and also know the structure of Lancasters and other aircraft bomber to give you a good picture on how they maneuver inside the aircraft. Some passages are informal too because these are the personal accounts from journals of the soldiers.

In a nutshell, this book gives you a view of what air warfare looks like and hazards and terrors and challenges that comes with it.

The lesson I can take is be grateful for the soldiers that fought in the war. Their experiences will always be incomparable to some hardships that we may be experiencing now.
346 reviews1 follower
June 21, 2024
Easy read

An enjoyable collection of WWII airmen stories from bomber crew members in the RAF. The stories were well written and it was interesting to see the perspective from the British and Canadian point of view. Flying bombers was not for the faint of heart.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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