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Das Boot - Is this the original (English Version) ?
I've just been on a 700+km roundabout (to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Souther...arge_Telescope) and surroundings and found this book in an obscure shop in possibly, the remotest part of this country...
My question - Is it an original ? - It looks like it. I started reading, and I found myself reading the film script of Das Boot, word for word ?? |
Yes, it is. A great read.
Like most book to movie conversions it's not exactly the same but both, IMO, are great. |
looks like an old version - the best version!
Don't wait and get it! Take care of this masterpiece of german literature! :o |
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I couldn't believe my eyes when I saw it. I was about to walk out the shop with two old RAF books, when 'U-Boat' caught my eye from about 10 feet away. 'Hang on a moment', as I lunged towards the book, grabbed it and read the cover piece - that was it = 40 ZARs (approx 5 USDs). :) |
My copy is a 1976 Fontana paperback, bought new that's now held together with an elastic band. The binding failed years ago due to many readings.
Time to buy a replacement I guess so this is a nice reminder. Thanks. |
I have a fairly new reprint of the same version.
http://www.amazon.com/Das-Boot-Boat-...words=das+boot There will be some variations, mostly characters cut out to make the movie more understandable. For the most part the movie is very faithful to the book. |
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I have the same 1975 First American Edition
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its sad that after such success of Das Boot that his other works have not been translated in to english - i desperatly would love to read them.
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AbeBooks.com has 3 hardcover 1975 first edition copies. One is a first printing, the other 2 are fourth printing. They are not cheap $80 for the first printing and $60 each for the other two. I have done business with them and am a happy customer.
:salute: |
No doubt known by many on this forum, "Iron Coffins" by Herbert A. Werner is also a great read!
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Herbert Werner (born 13 May 1920), was a Kriegsmarine (German Navy) officer who, by his own reckoning, was one of only about "two dozen captains still alive" at the end of World War II. He served in five U-boats, as an Ensign, Executive Officer and Captain in the Atlantic Ocean, the English Channel, the North Sea, the Baltic, the Norwegian Sea and the Mediterranean. He survived the sinking of U-612 in the Baltic and the loss of U-415 in Brest harbour. At the end of the war, he was detained in turn by British, American and French troops before making his way back to Germany in late autumn 1945. He moved to the United States in 1957 and is now an American citizen.[1][2] Werner later wrote a best-selling memoir of life in the U-boat service, titled "Iron Coffins". |
Still has heavy 'poetic license' though, and who can blame him?
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...alot of his commrades and Jurgen Rohwer:woot: |
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