Soldier of Misfortune

Soldier of Misfortune

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Soldier of Misfortune

Memoirs of an Army Commando, 1940-1945




Language:English
Format:Hardback
Dimensions:6.25" x 9.25"
Pages:256
Photos:c. 20 b/w photos, 3 b/w maps
Publisher:Helion and Company
ISBN:9781804519592



Soldier of Misfortune is the previously unpublished personal memoir of Martin Ferrey, who served as a front-line officer in No. 9 Commando in the Second World War. Martin provides an honest account of his military experience, ranging from the hilarious to the harrowing. His writing style is modest, humorous, and engaging. Martin, like so many other young men of the time, was not a professional soldier. He writes honestly about the difficulties he faced in coming to terms with military service, the repetition of seemingly mindless tasks, the perceived pettiness of training staff, and personality clashes with senior officers. While his modesty at times overshadows the reality of his experiences, private letters provided by the Ferrey family reveal the stark, painful truth of Martin’s wounds received in action, and the unorthodox yet pioneering treatment received at the hands of a military psychologist. As a Commando officer, Martin encounters a myriad of fascinating historical characters throughout his service, such as Randolph Churchill, Evelyn Waugh, and Lord Mountbatten, not to mention an extensive cast of highly decorated soldiers famous within Britain’s wartimes special forces. Included at the end of the book is a controversial article Martin submitted to the Daily Mirror a few years after the War’s conclusion, in which he urges his fellow veterans to stop complaining about the hardships of adjusting once again to civilian life, and to just ‘get on with it’.