I have read all his books and have the complete set, from time to time in the winter I will take one out and read it again, bonlngy or not I still like to read them.
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Sven Hassel
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Originally posted by J.von Canon View PostT I can't prove it-I think the writer who calls himself "Sven Hassel" might be the same guy who goes by the later nom de plume "Guy Sajer"....
The verbage is so,so similar...
But a pure fake, - also the first books, remember the hole gangs was killed in the first book? But raised to the occasion in the next
http://home.tiscali.dk/haaest/Hassel-Hazel/Texts/Dansk/01-kapitel.htm
A DK site about him. Use Google to translate
But it is still good books, - and pretty funny too
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Sven Hassell
I too have the entire collection of his books. I thought they were great reads. This is totally fiction, but fun. Don't down him, I personally like his work better than Leo Kesslers.
I also own the Misfit Brigade Oh God was it awful! Great uniforms, great tanks, but Crappy everything else. They could have done SO much with it, I think they were under a Low (0) budget at the time.
Hans Helmut Kirst is another great author. The film Night of the Generals was a good one.
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There was a real Sven Hassel, his father was Danish and his mother was German, or the other way around. He deserted a prewar cavalry unit, was caught, and sent to a Bewahrungseinheit to get an attitude adjustment. Before the war started, these were harsh but not inhumane. (They were not allowed Waffenfarbe, and where it was supposed to be, the piping was just Feldgrau).
The real Sven Hassel wrote just one book, Legion of the Damned, and died in the early 1950's. Several more books were ghostwritten by his wife, Lotte. The remainder of the pulp fiction produced under his name was written by publishing house hacks who were typically paid one cent per word. The man who is claiming to be Sven Hassel today is a fraud. The actual guy died more than 50 years ago.
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Chris, do you have any trustworthy sources from which you got your info?
Everything I ever read about Hassel was always highly controversial, and it seems that no one realy knows the truth... I would be interested to see definitive proof of your version, particularly because it could mean that Legion of the Damned is maybe more trustworthy then I thought.
By the way, it ws published in 1953; so after his death?
JL
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Yes, British historian Bruce Quarrie met and interviewed Lotte about her husband and the books before she died in the early 1980's. The information above is summarized from my correspondence with Bruce after the interview.
Yes, I believe Legion of the Damned was published either shortly before the real Hassel's death or posthumously. The account in it of retraining in a prewar disciplinary unit is certainly exaggerated but probably contains a kernal of truth. All that later baloney about the "27th penal panzer regiment" and so on is just nonsense; the unit never existed, and wartime penal units (such as Infanterie Bataillon z.b.V 500) were all infantry formations. The Germans certainly did not give such men tanks.
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[quote=Chris;2722773]Yes, British historian Bruce Quarrie met and interviewed Lotte about her husband and the books before she died in the early 1980's. The information above is summarized from my correspondence with Bruce after the interview.
You have to backup that statement with more than "The information above is summarized from my correspondence with Bruce after the interview. "
Please...
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Originally posted by C.O.Sargent View PostYa I like Night of the Generals, people get to bent out of shape tearing apart a movie or a book instead of just enjoying it for its entertainment value.
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