Comrades, Avenge Us

Comrades, Avenge Us

by Stephen G. Esrati
Comrades, Avenge Us

Comrades, Avenge Us

by Stephen G. Esrati

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Overview

Maj. William Macnaughton of the Canadian army and Maj. John Bowles of O.S.S. lead a team into occupied Yugoslavia. Captured on Christmas 1944, the team's enlisted men are mercilessly beheaded while Bowles and Macnaughton are held as bargaining chips in case Germany loses the war.

Tortured by the SS, and then liberated at the end of the war--Bowles and Macnaughton hunt for their captors across four continents to bring them to justice.

The book delves into how the United States actually helped some Nazi war criminals escape, including the Nazi who helped put Neil Armstrong on the moon even though he had killed a bunch of GIs in an underground V-2 factory because one of them allegedly stole a loaf of bread. Other points of historical interest is the story of the attempt by Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy, R-Wis., to get all of the killers reponsible for the Malmédy Massacre off the hook. McCarthy claimed the U.S.  Army obtained confessions by torturing the SS men by attacking their genitals. That charge turns out to be a lie.

Bowles an all-American from Ohio and Macnaughton who becomes the last Canadian to be knighted organize a team to capture the perpetrators in a story of revenge in the page-turner thriller "Comrades, Avenge us."

Reviews: by Edward J.Trout, a schoolteacher from Bristol, Pa.

I read Stephen's Book in record time. Kudos to Mr. Esrati for a "great" read. It was one of those "rare books" that one wants to slow down when one nears the end. Well all readers of this genre know why. There are few authors who can carry the reader and accurate history in their narrative. Stephen's technique of having his characters narrate "mini-history lessons" on such a complex topic was a "sui-generis" stylistic accomplishment.

Review: by Kevin Begin, a musician from Dayton, Ohio

Stephen Esrati wrote a book that kept my interest from start to finish. I thought I was reading a non-fiction novel until I read the acknowledgements at the end. The story moves quickly starting at the planning stage of a military intelligence operation during WWII and finally focusing on the search for Nazi war criminals. The book has no slow sections, and as such, I was always engrossed with the material. What makes the book read like non-fiction must be the result of Mr. Esrati's dilegent research into the people and places that comprise this book.

I highly recommend this book to anyone that loves adventure and the pursuit of justice.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781462816217
Publisher: Author Solutions
Publication date: 06/28/2000
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 395 KB

What People are Saying About This

Joseph Zika

Man's inhumanity to man... not unlike those events that are scattered throughout the world today are revealed. Events occurring shortly after W.W.II and how an O.S.S. team is treated after capture by the Germans. But the most riveting comment that really strikes a cord..."In the third cell, German whitewash had tried to conceal 'Comrades, avenge us,' but the letters are still visible."
This is very apropos...I liked it and would recommend reading it...the dialog is believable a good read.

Roland Klinger

I want to give a comment on Esrati´s book as a German reader, who was two years old when W.W.II ended. I started to read the book with some distance and kind of reluctantly.
Didn't know what I was confronted with. But after some pages I was immersed in the story and even some language problems didn't prevent me from reading on every possible minute I could spare. A brilliantly written story - fiction combined with the real events in a way that the reader has to become concerned about how the international community should handle crimes against mankind.
Esrati´s book was not finished for me when I read the last page, it's a story for a reflection after having read it. And it leaves the question: Is mankind able to learn from history or is she condemned to repeat it?

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