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Books on Coventry

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Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex
241 of 445  Thu 7th Jan 2021 4:45pm  

Thank you everyone for your helpful advice, working on it.
Local History and Heritage - Books on Coventry
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex
242 of 445  Fri 8th Jan 2021 3:32pm  

Mcsporran thank you. I agree with you, but still a good read, in fact I loved it.
Local History and Heritage - Books on Coventry
lindatee2002
Virginia USA
243 of 445  Fri 12th Mar 2021 4:07pm  

I don't know if this is in the right place but while I was looking through one of my many boxes of books I found a fantastic book called COVENTRY: A CENTURY OF NEWS. It looks as though it was published by the Evening Telegraph in 1991 and it has wonderful articles, photos and ads. I'd love to post some of these as they would reach almost every corner of interest in the forum
Local History and Heritage - Books on Coventry
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex
244 of 445  Sat 13th Mar 2021 10:51am  

Helen, your post 248 creates what I think are some errors but how can I answer, without people saying I'm rude, or similar remarks. To be frank your book or whatever you read has let you down on a number of occasions. Opposing you creates a lot of hate against me, but history has proved you wrong several times. Helen, we have big differences about history but mine is backed by English Heritage in most cases. Yours?
Local History and Heritage - Books on Coventry
Helen F
Warrington
245 of 445  Sat 13th Mar 2021 11:47am  

Of course I'm wrong some of the time Kaga. Sometimes I misremember, sometimes the source was outdated and sometimes the sources are all wrong. I use lots of sources, including but not limited to books. But if there is a disagreement I try to find new sources to decide one way or the other. The facts about Coventry are somewhat scarce. Many old documents were destroyed by the Protestants. Others were burnt in a fire at Birmingham Library before the wars. New information is coming along as archaeology answers questions but also pose new ones. Our national history is also subject to new knowledge or interpretation. How can any one person keep track of it all? So if anyone disagrees with anyone else, it's best to quote the source rather than relying on memory. And be respectful in the reply. My contribution to solving questions is to try and see clues in images and maps. I like to think I've found some new things out. Certainly stuff that even English Heritage and David McGrory don't know.
Local History and Heritage - Books on Coventry
Mick Strong
Coventry
246 of 445  Sat 13th Mar 2021 12:37pm  

On 13th Mar 2021 10:51am, Kaga simpson said: Helen, your post 248 creates what I think are some errors but how can I answer, without people saying I'm rude, or similar remarks. To be frank your book or whatever you read has let you down on a number of occasions. Opposing you creates a lot of hate against me, but history has proved you wrong several times. Helen, we have big differences about history but mine is backed by English Heritage in most cases. Yours?
You could answer a bit more politely? No one hates you for your opposition, but we do not like the way in which you go about it.
Mick Strong

Local History and Heritage - Books on Coventry
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex
247 of 445  Sat 13th Mar 2021 3:53pm  

Mick Strong I do not have the education. My schooling stopped when I was eleven, teachers went in the forces etc. You know there was a lot where your parents had a different life to you and I'm like them. I need your criiticism, not your silence, but thanks Mick, I do appreciate what you say.
Local History and Heritage - Books on Coventry
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex
248 of 445  Fri 7th May 2021 3:04pm  

belushi S.A.S. by Damien Lewis I have long and often argued about the accurate bombing of Coventry, and how they approached Coventry in close formation as if they were on a main road. Coventry is not mentioned, but quashes a lot of myths about the war. To me it fills in a lot of gaps, among the things I knew. It's a library book so doesn't need money.
Local History and Heritage - Books on Coventry
belushi
coventry
249 of 445  Fri 7th May 2021 3:44pm  

Thanks Kaga - just read the review on the Waterstones' site - looks an interesting read.
Local History and Heritage - Books on Coventry
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex
250 of 445  Sat 8th May 2021 4:59pm  

This is not a fiction book, there's a lot I can vouch for, the training at Ringway, the difference between them and my spell (3 years), the weapons that went obsolete, sten gun, 9mm pistol etc, the initiative tests. The recruiting was tougher, a 45% failure rate, and more, but much more was the not knowing in early 45 of what was kept secret in those days.
Local History and Heritage - Books on Coventry
Rob Orland
Historic Coventry
251 of 445  Sat 8th May 2021 9:55pm  

On 7th May 2021 3:04pm, Kaga simpson said: S.A.S. by Damien Lewis
Hi again Kaga, I just searched, and Damien Lewis seems to have written a few books under the title "S.A.S." Is the one you're referring to, by any chance, "Shadow Raiders"? That one looks closest to what you mention about bombing accuracy, as it's about "Operation Biting", which was the code for the Bruneval Raid where we sent a squad ably led by Major John Frost across the sea to literally kidnap a German Wurzburg radar! I've read another highly detailed book about that raid, and it's captivating. However, the Wurzburg was used to detect British planes, not for directing their own towards targets such as Coventry. X-Gerat (the successor to Knikebein) was used for that. A super book called "Instruments of Darkness" gives a full account of both sides' (and later, others) development of electronic warfare, including all the types of radar and beam finders through to guided surface to air missiles.
Local History and Heritage - Books on Coventry
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex
252 of 445  Sun 9th May 2021 8:31am  

Yes, the book is 'Shadow Raiders', and it does say that on 'Moonlight Sonata' they flew on beams that took them directly to the target. I do have one question about the book, but it's not about raids but training of the raids You do realise that all this was classified info for about fifty years, he could not have written before 1980 at least. I'm inclined to believe that bombing casualty lists were also withheld until after the war.
Local History and Heritage - Books on Coventry
Rob Orland
Historic Coventry
253 of 445  Mon 10th May 2021 2:44pm  

I would think you're right Kaga about the classification. In the mid 1970s there was suddenly a deluge of books about the more secret sides to the war after a 30 year classification was lifted. I was at school at the time, and in the mid-70s the word "Enigma" suddenly started to be bandied about like it had just been invented! I've heard that some secrets have still not been allowed to be revealed..... the mind boggles as to what could be so sensitive after 76 years! Oh my
Local History and Heritage - Books on Coventry
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex
254 of 445  Mon 10th May 2021 4:49pm  

Rob, all My mother would have been appalled at some of the things I did, or the way I had to dress on initiative tests to escape the eyes of the police etc. The training was relentless, no shaving, no haircuts, we were excused normal army drill for weeks on end. Until a few days after VE day, neither did we know what happened to the men on Operation Colossus - classified. In 1954 I set out to try and find what happened to them, but all I had to go on was tales from men that knew about the raid - I failed, but got very close. The path of the Gods on Amalfi mountain range near Salerno was as far as I got. The hole in the Whitley fuselage was dangerous - if you dropped out you had the danger of your chute pack hitting the floor which pitched you forward so that hit your head on the opposite side of the metal floor. If you leaped too much, you still cracked your forehead. A nightmare. The veterans that trained me knew all about Major Larsen whose statue is now at Hereford.
Local History and Heritage - Books on Coventry
Helen F
Warrington
255 of 445  Tue 29th Jun 2021 6:36pm  

Other than for specific books, I don't know if this has been directly linked to before but it's useful to bring it up again. An archive of many old books you can read for free Ignore the link to the Wayback Machine at the top and type what you're looking for in the search box at the bottom. You can search within the books once you've selected one but, due to incomplete letter recognition, it will miss things. Some copies have original picture some don't.
Local History and Heritage - Books on Coventry

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