The Colditz Story... and what to read next

The Colditz Story... and what to read next

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Maxf

Original Poster:

8,409 posts

241 months

Tuesday 2nd July 2019
quotequote all
I discovered this book, written by an 'escaper' Pat Reid, a few weeks ago and thoroughly enjoyed it - it's an amazing story and laugh out loud funny in places (the barber incident for those who might have read it)... The follow up 'The Latter Days at Colditz' is a bit harder going, but still entertaining.

I'd put it sort of in the same category of entertainment as the David Niven book 'The Moon's a Balloon', which is a firm favorite of mine (after discovering it on here).

Any suggestions what to read next in the same vein? Non-fiction, entertaining and even slightly swashbuckling I'd guess!






Yertis

18,049 posts

266 months

Friday 5th July 2019
quotequote all
Maxf said:
I discovered this book, written by an 'escaper' Pat Reid, a few weeks ago and thoroughly enjoyed it - it's an amazing story and laugh out loud funny in places (the barber incident for those who might have read it)... The follow up 'The Latter Days at Colditz' is a bit harder going, but still entertaining.

I'd put it sort of in the same category of entertainment as the David Niven book 'The Moon's a Balloon', which is a firm favorite of mine (after discovering it on here).

Any suggestions what to read next in the same vein? Non-fiction, entertaining and even slightly swashbuckling I'd guess!
I often mention "Carrier Pilot" by Norman Hanson. Certainly entertaining all the way through, by turns funny and swashbuckling (along with a smattering of horror and tragedy).

"The Boy Who Shot Down an Airship" by Michael Green also springs to mind as a book with the same anecdotal humour as Moon's a Balloon. Similar era.