A Talent for Adventure: The Remarkable Wartime Exploits of Lt Col Pat Spooner MBE

by Pat Spooner

Hardcover, 2012

Status

Available

Call number

940.5481

Tags

Publication

Pen & Sword, Barnsley

Description

Books on prison camps, daring escapes and life with the Resistance abound. Pat Spooners story is different and more compelling in one important respect. It recounts the gripping and dramatic rescue of two senior British generals (one a VC) and an air vice marshal from occupied Italy by the author and his companion who had themselves both escaped from an Italian PoW camp.This book covers a range of wartime exploits from operating behind Japanese lines in Burma and Malaya to laying secret dumps on remote islands in the Bay of Bengal for the benefit of RAF aircrew unable to reach their base. At the wars end, Pat Spooner, a 25-year-old lieutenant colonel, commanded a war crimes investigation unit in Java and Burma. He describes his personal experiences of the intensive efforts to track down and bring to justice the perpetrators of some of the foulest crimes ever committed by Man. Then, as a senior staff officer (Assistant Adjutant General) he spent a further twelve months controlling the nerve center, in Singapore, of the entire war crimes organization in Southeast Asia involving 18 investigation units.… (more)

Language

Original language

English

Physical description

256 p.; 15.75 cm

ISBN

1848848102 / 9781848848108

Local notes

Officer in 8th Gurkha Rifles (1920–2014). PoW in PG 19 Bologna. When the Armistice was declared Spooner and Jimmie Ferguson, a captain in the Royal Corps of Signals, hid in a loft to escape being transferred to Germany with the rest of the prisoners. For the next three months Spooner and Ferguson were on the run. They helped Lieutenant-General Philip Neame, Major-General Richard O’Connor and Air Vice-Marshal Owen Boyd escape by boat to Allied lines, December 1943. See also Philip Neame, ‘Playing with Strife’.
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