Neil's War: One boy’s story of his evacuation to Ireland at the outbreak of WWII

Author

Neil W. Murphy

Book Description

This is the story of the author evacuated in 1939 at the age of six  with his brother and sister from Sheffield to the safety of relatives in Cork in southern Ireland and his return to Britain in 1943. The second part of the book covers two more war years in his home city all but flattened by the German blitz of December 1940. It ends on VE Night 1945.

What this small boy gets up to in Ireland beggars belief. The author had an affinity with his Irish hosts and his four-year stay  is not without humour. But the incidents he recalls include the firing of Cork’s largest department store, Grant's, in 1942 and providing the intelligence that may have caused the torpedoeing of the SS Irish Oak in May 1943 by the German submarine U-607. This incident prompted diplomatic exchanges between Britain, Ireland, America and Nazi Germany and almost brought down de Valera's government. The Irish section of the book ends with the boy, not yet ten years old, being interviewed by and deported on de Valera's personal order.

The young Neil's "adventures" do not stop there. The second part of the book includes a harrowing account of the 11-year old stowing away in a Lancaster Bomber piloted by his uncle on a raid over Berlin. By VE Night the young lad, now twelve, has become more interested in girls, as you would also expect.

We think the book is a classic in the genre of wartime memoires. We also believe it is unique in being recalled through hypnotic regression and thereby told through the eyes of the boy himself. The author was a practicing hypnotherapist for much of his working life and on his retirement revisited this period of his childhood seeking answers to memories and flashbacks that had haunted him for more than sixty years. He tells in his preface how this was achieved.

It is a one-off story told by a lad growing up too quickly. It is also one with dark undertones. 

You must decide whether he was an innocent used by the unscrupulous Republican agent Finnegan, by Sister Ann of “the Mission”, Stan of Short’s slaughter house, his wily cousin Clare who took his earnings for dresses and his uncle who took it for drink. Or whether he rose to the challenge of being separated from his parents at a very young age in difficult times. It is also an emotional story not least because of the shooting down over occupied France early in 1944 of the boy’s hero, Uncle Bill. The Epilogue is a tribute to him, Wing Commander W. M. Russell DFC & Bar and the crew of Halifax LL 280 of 138 Squadron on its last mission out of Tempsford RAF dropping an SOE agent. An eye-witness account of the shooting down of the Halifax on the morning of 8 May 1944 is given by a young farmer's son.

  
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Book Details

ISBN 978-0-9544518-5-1 published in the United Kingdom in paperback, 19 March 2010. Author Neil W. Murphy, publisher RoseTintedSpecs Imprint, printed in Sittingbourne, Kent, on 90 gsm Bookwove paper. Paperback is full colour laminated cover, mono interior, 275 pages, 216 mm high by 139 mm wide (8.5" x 5.5"), cover price £10. Front cover illustrations "Lancaster Bomber" and "Michael, Jean and Neil". Rear cover illustrations "Grant's Department Store Fire, 1942" and "Sinking of the SS Irish Oak". An edition printed in America will be available shortly through CreateSpace.com and Amazon on-line (in April). Text and physical characteristics are identical except the American printing is on American trade white 90 gsm paper.

This is a high quality paperback with an attractive gloss cover. Book size is generous, as are the interior margins and font size. It is a reading experience similar to that of a hardback book.

  

Versions Available

In flip-book form it is a different reading experience, as seen in the flip-book samples (above). You can flip pages on your computer screen, enlarge, bookmark etc and not have to carry the book around. The text is bright and clear, bigger than an e-book and convenient if you spend a lot of time in front of your desktop or notebook computer. It is an ideal format if you want to display or project pages in reports, for example, as Print and Save facilities are enabled.  

  

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