Уильям Макгиверн - Soldiers of ’44

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A whole generation has passed since The Young Lions and The Naked and the Dead, since the appearance of a novel worthy of a place in the literary roll call of the Second World War. Now, in Soldiers of ’44, Sergeant Buell (“Bull”) Docker, perhaps the most memorable hero in all World War II fiction, prepares his fifteen-man gun section in Belgium’s snowy Ardennes Forest for the desperate German counteroffensive that became known as the Battle of the Bulge. The twelve days of fighting which follow tell an unforgettable story of personal valor and fear — a story which Docker must later attempt to explain and defend before a post-war tribunal of old-line Army officers who seek to rewrite the record of battle and soldier’s code that Docker and his men fought so hard to maintain. A magnificent novel, by the author the New York Times called “one of today’s ablest storytellers.”

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PRIVATE FIRST CLASS GUIDO LINARI: Linari never replied to Solvis’ requests for information. Solvis’ third letter was returned from Linari’s former home on Pell Street in New York City stamped “Not Known at This Address.”

LIEUTENANT GENERAL WALTER ADAMSON: Adamson retired from the army in 1954. He captained a senior officers’ polo team at Boca Raton, Florida, and contributed articles to leading military journals. His extensive memoirs. The Last Great War, were published posthumously in 1970.

GENERAL JOSEF “SEPP” DIETRICH: The commander of the Sixth SS Panzer Army was sentenced to life imprisonment for war crimes in 1946, but was paroled and released in 1955. In 1957, General Dietrich was sentenced by a German court to eighteen months in prison for complicity in the deaths of Captain Ernest Röhm and other SA (Sturmabteilungen) officers in 1934. The general died in Germany in 1966.

PRIVATE FIRST CLASS SONNY LAUREL: Laurel is buried in the Mount Olivet Home of Eternal Rest in a suburb of South Chicago. Funds for a Little League baseball park were donated to the city by his parents, the Wellington Laurels. The Sonny Laurel Memorial Field was constructed in Rogers Park on the north side of Chicago on land contributed jointly by the Laurel family and Loyola Academy.

COLONEL OTTO SKORZENY: Skorzeny, sixty-seven, died of bronchial cancer in Madrid, Spain, on July 8, 1975. After World War II Skorzeny was acquitted by an Allied War Crimes Tribunal. While awaiting a denazification trial, Skorzeny escaped from a German prison camp at Darmstadt and spent the remaining years in Spain, where he worked as an industrial engineer. In the 1960s he was accused by official sources in Israel of organizing a network of ex-Nazis called Die Spinne (“The Spider”) whose goals were said to be the resurrection of the Nazi Party and the destruction of the state of Israel. In 1973 it was reported by an Italian magazine that he had served as a consultant to a group planning the assassination of Premier Fidel Castro of Cuba.

COLONEL GEORGE RANKIN: Promoted to Brigadier General four years after World War II, George Rankin was killed in action in the first months of the war in Korea.

MAJOR SYDNEY KARSH: Discharged from the Army in January, 1946, Karsh served for twenty years as a senior partner in the New York law firm of Masterson. Karsh and Nevins. Specializing originally in international labor legislation, Karsh and his associates have in recent years devoted their full time to the International Amnesty Movement, in cooperation with the United Nations Human Rights Committee.

CORPORAL WALTER SCHMITZER: Schmitzer was discharged from the United States Army with a seventy percent disability, suffering from a variety of nervous disorders adjudged directly connected to his combat experiences in the Ardennes. Schmitzer supplemented his Army pension by working as a dispatcher for Goodwill Industries in Detroit, Michigan. In 1967 he moved to Laguna Beach, California, and answered only one subsequent inquiry from Solvis. “I haven’t married and don’t expect to now.”

FRITZ WENDEL: Wendel, who test-piloted the first model of the Messerschmitt-262 on July 18th, 1942, was found dead of gunshot wounds at his home in Augsburg, West Germany, in February of 1975. A hunting rifle was at his side. Police would not comment on whether the death of Wendel, fifty-nine, was a suicide or an accident.

LIEUTENANT BART WHITTER: Discharged from the army at Fort Benning, Georgia, on February 10th, 1946, Whitter returned to Mobile, Alabama, and entered the real estate business. He was a responsive correspondent. He ran for the office of sheriff, but was defeated by several thousand votes. His wife divorced him in 1956. Whitter remarried the same year. In his brief political campaign, his slogan had been: “Vote for the Man!” In a recent letter to Solvis, Whitter appraised his defeat at the polls in these words: “I never changed. The people knew where I stood, but they changed. The whole damned South is changed. People think change is the same thing as progress, but I can tell you this — they’re dead wrong.”

PRIVATE FIRST CLASS VALENTINO “SHORTY” KOHLER: Kohler sent Solvis Christmas cards over the years. Additional news of Kohler came in a letter from Buell Docker dated March 17, 1963. The following excerpt is relevant: “I thought the man looked familiar when I went into P.J. Clarke’s pub about ten last night. He was standing beside his cab across the street. When I came out an hour or so later, he was still there and there was no doubt about it. He’d been waiting for me, and insisted on driving me back to the hotel. He wouldn’t throw the flag even though I reminded him a hack inspector could ground him a month for that. No, the ride was on him. Shorty’s put on weight and lost most of his hair but he’s still ready to tell the world where to shove it. When we shook hands at the hotel, he said, ‘I just wish to hell the guys hadn’t called me Shorty. Because I wasn’t near as short as them rupture-heads thought I was.’ I asked him if he’d meet me for lunch the next day, but he told me he’d be working over in Brooklyn and couldn’t make it.”

COLONEL JOACHIM PEIPER: Peiper commanded the “Kampfgruppe Peiper,” which was responsible for executing eighty-six American military prisoners of war in a field near the town of Malmédy during the Ardennes offensive. Colonel Peiper was sentenced to death by an Allied War Crimes Tribunal, but the sentence was commuted and he was released from Landsberg Prison in 1956. In 1964 Peiper purchased a vacation home in the village of Traves in the Vosges Mountains of France. On the night of July 20th, 1976, the villa was destroyed by explosions and flames. Firemen later recovered the charred body of Joachim Peiper from the wreckage. The words “Peiper SS” were discovered painted on roads leading to and from the village of Traves. Other members of the Peiper family were not in France on the night of the explosion.

DAVID HAMLIN: Hamlin, Buell Docker’s good friend, is a professor of history at the College of Pennsylvania. He was married to Elaine Riley in 1948. Their son, Charles, was born in 1952. Professor Hamlin received a Pulitzer Prize in 1961 for his three-volume study of epic poetry in relation to the concept of the war hero in various European cultures. Charles Hamlin enlisted in the United States Army and was killed in 1972 on his twentieth birthday in a helicopter crash near Hon Quan in South Vietnam.

JOHN TRANKIC: After his discharge from the Army, Trankic operated a machine and welding shop in Calumet City, Illinois, for twenty years. In 1967 he moved his family to northern Wisconsin and opened a gasoline station and bait shop near Crawling Stone Lake. As a hobby, Trankic teaches automobile repair and maintenance to the Chippewa Indians on the Lac de Flambeau reservation.

MARGRET GAUTIER: Mademoiselle Gautier lived with her aunt and uncle, the Etienne Francoeurs, until she enrolled in a pre-medical course at the University of Louvain. At twenty-four. Dr. Gautier emigrated to Israel. She wrote one letter to Mrs. Agnes Larkin, forwarded by the United States Army. The letter closed with this sentence: “I remember now only the coldness in the cab of the truck and your husband’s words, which I didn’t understand but which were so comforting to the very frightened child I was then.” Agnes Larkin sent a copy to Solvis, asking his advice on how best to answer it. Solvis explained certain events of that distant night, but omitted any mention of the German supplies Larkin had taken from Castle Rêve.

LIEUTENANT COLONEL KARL JAEGER: In the spring of 1945, United States Army Graves Registration teams collected the bodies of hundreds of German soldiers who had fallen in the Ardennes in the last great German offensive of World War 11. These soldiers were buried in mass graves in unmarked fields near the battle sites where they had met their deaths. Among the German dead buried outside Lepont was Lieutenant Colonel Karl Jaeger. Solvis received this information from Father Emile Juneau, pastor of the Eglise de Saint Esprit in that village. The priest had attempted to locate Karl Jaeger’s wife and family in Dresden, but their apartment building was among the thousands destroyed in the fire bombing of that city in February of 1945.

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