Prisoner of War in Germany
ISBN-10: 0747806853
ISBN-13: 9780747806851
Contributor: C. Peter Chen
Review Date: 9 Feb 2009
As servicemen of the Western Allies became captured in Germany, they were treated better than their Eastern European counterparts, but the experience was by no means comfortable. The enlisted men lived a life of hard labor, only returning to their quarters at night to a bowl of watery soup with a few pieces of potatoes and a chunk of bread (with the former often rotten and the latter moldy). The officers did not receive better treatment even with the exemption from physical labor; an imprisoned officer was said to live an unbearably monotonous life at the camps, constantly trying his psyche.
Shire Library's Prisoner of War in Germany by Peter Doyle introduces the readers to the WW2-era German POW camps and their inhabitants. The "Kriegies", nicknames of the POWs, were innovative by necessity, fashioning cookers from empty tin cans and carving utensils out of wood. While Germans sent photographs of them playing football as if they were on holiday, the truth was that the prisoners fought to stay alive. Some of them relentlessly planned for daring escapes, resulting in timeless stories such as the "Great Escape" and the sad tales of plans gone terribly wrong. Meanwhile, other POWs directed their ambitions toward their survival instead, hoarding food, listening to news of Allied advances with their contraband radios, and awaiting the day of their liberation. From camp theatrical productions to forging fake documents, from the Red Cross aid packages to the post cards that the Germans let prisoners send home, Prisoner of War in Germany provides a general overview of the lives of POWs. To keep the overview from becoming impersonal, Doyle introduces the stories of three POWs, Private Leslie Doyle of the British Army, Private Aben Caplen of the United States Army, and Flying Officer Duncan Black of the Royal Air Force, contrasting their experiences as prisoners of war and personifying the otherwise faceless descriptions.
Color photographs accompany the text throughout the entire book, which are helpful for readers to see the Klim cans, prisoner-printed newsletters, and other artifacts, thus providing greater insight to the understanding of camp life. Photographs and text of letters and post cards sent home from POW camps also achieve similar effect.
The size of the book, at only about 60 pages, reflects the lack of in-depth detail on this topic. However, it should not take away from the fact that Prisoner of War in Germany is a great primer for those not familiar with the experience of the WW2-era prisoners of war in Germany, and it makes this reader speculate whether there would be a similar title about the experience of British, Commonwealth, and American POWs in Japanese camps.
Back to Main | Back to Book Reviews Index
請考慮透過 Patreon 支持本站。任何數量都會有莫大幫助!感謝您的支持。 請幫助宣傳: 訂閱 WW2DB,掌握最新動態: |
A review copy or review sample of this product was provided by the publisher or vendor to WW2DB; opinions expressed in this review are not influenced by this fact.

» Prisoner of War in Germany
- » 1,182 人物傳記
- » 337 事件
- » 45,119 時間軸條目
- » 1,248 軍艦
- » 350 飛機型號
- » 207 車輛型號
- » 376 兵器型號
- » 123 史料文件
- » 261 設施
- » 470 書評
- » 28,409 照片
- » 365 地圖
Joachim von Ribbentrop, German Foreign Minister, Aug 1939