Thread: Oral Histories
View Single Post
Old 12-16-10, 11:26 AM   #1
Growler
A long way from the sea
 
Growler's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Iowa
Posts: 1,913
Downloads: 21
Uploads: 0
Default Oral Histories

I like to read - a lot; I like learning, so this is no surprise. Stephen Ambrose's books were, to me, a convenient and entertaining vehicle to carry a bibliography in, where there's good stuff written by the guys who actually did it, rather than by an intermediary author who's naturally biased to spin it their way - even unintentionally, bias happens. World War II vet's personal stories are like some crazy drug for me; I get addicted, and then am looking for more... more... and more.

So, that said, I'm curious as to your favorite oral histories/autobiographies.

Naturally, ADM Calvert's Silent Running comes to mind for this community - a pretty good read about his time aboard two different submarines in WW2, from his days as a boot shavetail. Anytime I need a sub fix and I can't get down town to Torsk, I crack this book open - or play SHIV. I haven't yet bought my own copy of Torsk Times, but that's coming, too, if I can find it.

Death Traps, by Belton Cooper, may be familiar to many of you who've read Ambrose; Cooper's work figures heavily in Citizen Soldiers as a source. Cooper was a maintenance officer in an Armored Division in Europe during 44-45, and tells the story of the Sherman with candor and honesty. It's another great read.

On the other front, I recently read a book entitled Another Bowl of Kapusta by Gottfried Dulias, a Luftwaffe fighter pilot who spent three years as a guest of the Russians (45-48, roughly). While the book's editing is poor, the content is interesting and a little terrifying - for him, War Two ended in 1948, since by then he hadn't the decency to die. I've met him over three days this past October, and he's a charming, interesting guy.

Lastly, one more book I'd like to throw out there is one that I had a personal stake in: Eleven-Two. Written by former American Ex-POW president Frank Kravetz and his daughter, it tells Frank's amazing story as a gunner in a B-17 in the 8th AF's Fireball Outfit (457th BG(H)) through his imprisonment in Germany until liberation, and after. (Total disclosure time: I was asked by his publisher to be a contributing editor - mostly for accuracy in nomenclature and spelling of German words.)

So - what are your favorite first-person histories?
__________________
At Fiddler’s Green, where seamen true
When here they’ve done their duty
The bowl of grog shall still renew
And pledge to love and beauty.
Growler is offline   Reply With Quote