Hostages of Colditz

By
Giles Romilly & Michael Alexander

Praeger Publishers
New York
1973


Dust jacket adds: The fantastic story of the imprisonment and escape attempts of a handful of prominent captives in Nazi Germany's most notorious punishment camp
First published in 1954 in Great Britain, with the title The Privileged Nightmare
vii, [1], 246 p.: 4 unpaginated pages containing 10 illustrations; 21.5 cm. (8.5 inches). Dark blue cloth, with gilt-stamped spine title. Glossy, color illustrated dust jacket.
First American Edition

"For two years during World War II, Giles Romilly and Michael Alexander shared a small room in the tower of Colditz Castle, the notorious German punishment camp. During that time, Colditz housed some six hundred prisoners of assorted nationalities and ranks. Most of them were there because they had been especially persistent or imaginative, though unsuccessful, in their attempts to escape from other places of internment; Colditz, in the heart of Germany, was considered virtually escapeproof. Romilly, a war correspondent, had been captured as a suspected spy when the Germans seized the port of Narvik, Norway, in April, 1940. In August, 1942, Alexander, a British commando in North Africa, had been taken prisoner behind German lines, wearing a German uniform. As a newspaperman, Romilly would probably have been released if it had not been known to the Germans that he was a nephew of Winston Churchill, which made him of great potential value as a hostage. Alexander, on the other hand, would probably have been shot as a spy if he had not told his captors, with some exaggeration, that he was a close relative of Field Marshal Alexander, then commander of the British troops in the Middle East" [from the dust jacket].

Book is in Fine/As New Condition: pages bright, clean, tight, and unmarked.
Dust Jacket is in Very Good Plus Condition: front section lightly rubbed. Nice copy!


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