Title: Panzer Gunner
Authour: Bruno Friesen
Publisher: Stackpole
ISBN: 978-0-8117-3598-8 (paperback)
Stars: 5 (out of 5)
Saw this book few years back and managed to find a copy after it was published by Stackpole. It's a biography of a panzer gunner who fought on the Eastern front.
Book starts off with a brief into in Bruno's family upbringing in Canada. Why his dad sent him and his brother to Germany just before the outbreak of war, and how he was treated by ethnic Germans when he was sent to work on their farm.
The chapters cover his enlistment in the German armed forces, and then his training as a panzer crewman.....which ultimately leads him to the gunner position. He describes some of his various tasks and a couple of brief encounters with the Soviet tank forces including when his tank was disabled. Also mentioned is what happens to soldiers in the rear when there are no tanks available for them to use.
The last few chapters cover him and his crews as they are equipped with the new Jagdpanzer IV and how they were used. Mostly in individual or real small groups. There is a really detailed chapter that covers how the gun worked for those that are interested in a lot of technical talk.
There are only a few pictures and some copies of hand drawn maps or of his certificates. The book ends with his return to Canada, his marriage and his volunteer work with the Canadian War Museum. Another good biography of a German soldier and his fight in WWII.
Authour: Bruno Friesen
Publisher: Stackpole
ISBN: 978-0-8117-3598-8 (paperback)
Stars: 5 (out of 5)
Saw this book few years back and managed to find a copy after it was published by Stackpole. It's a biography of a panzer gunner who fought on the Eastern front.
Book starts off with a brief into in Bruno's family upbringing in Canada. Why his dad sent him and his brother to Germany just before the outbreak of war, and how he was treated by ethnic Germans when he was sent to work on their farm.
The chapters cover his enlistment in the German armed forces, and then his training as a panzer crewman.....which ultimately leads him to the gunner position. He describes some of his various tasks and a couple of brief encounters with the Soviet tank forces including when his tank was disabled. Also mentioned is what happens to soldiers in the rear when there are no tanks available for them to use.
The last few chapters cover him and his crews as they are equipped with the new Jagdpanzer IV and how they were used. Mostly in individual or real small groups. There is a really detailed chapter that covers how the gun worked for those that are interested in a lot of technical talk.
There are only a few pictures and some copies of hand drawn maps or of his certificates. The book ends with his return to Canada, his marriage and his volunteer work with the Canadian War Museum. Another good biography of a German soldier and his fight in WWII.
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