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"Wellington Bomber raid October 1941"

10 Comments -

1 – 10 of 10
Blogger nevell said...

That was breathtaking, lyrical! It must be humbling too - the "comet" could just as easily have been your Dad's "kite", and then we wouldn't be reading this... I sensed a hint of "suspended animation" at one point in the commentary. This is a gem - it doesn't glorify the raid, but you get a sense of the adrenalin rush - and the relief afterwards.

15 July 2011 at 23:28

Anonymous rod said...

I absolutely concur with Nevell.

my father Sydney (1918-200) signed up for 12 years in the Royal Navy in 1937, which could be easily construed as very bad career move. Fighting on destroyers in the North Atlantic & the Med. Whilst not an erudite man, unlike Mr Banks senior by evidence of his vivid communicative skills, he never lost his basic true humanity after being involved in the most appalling carnage and the loss of his close friends. And I suppose a lot of families have these experiences of loved, missed ones packed away. Sorry, beginning to ramble...

16 July 2011 at 15:45

Blogger Peter Banks said...

Thanks, Tim. I'm thinking of releasing some more excerpts from his book, so much of it is deeply profound for such a young man at the time.

Also thanks to Rod, rambling is sometimes very good! I imagine some of my Dad's further writings would concur exactly with your thoughts.

Best, PB

20 July 2011 at 11:55

Anonymous Anonymous said...

It IS breathtaking,Peter;your earlier correspondent was correct.If this is typical of the material,you ought to move to Kindle publication as soon as you can find time;it deserves a wider audience than blogging. I cannot tell you how much good your call did me today, without sounding guilty of overstatement;I can only thank the impulse that encouraged you to make it.I look forward to our meeting very much and will be in touch with a suggested Nov date. All the best,Anthony(Anton)Lavers.

8 October 2012 at 14:34

Blogger Unknown said...

I agree with Anthony. This deserves a much wider audience. It is so amazingly descriptive and you almost feel you are there. Looking forward to reading more of your Father's experiences.

Heather

18 October 2012 at 09:36

Anonymous Doug Bowles said...

He was and is a super hero. See you again, Gramps.

29 December 2012 at 14:09

Anonymous Siegfried, the German said...

Thanks for sharing. It is definitely worth a wider audience. If it has been a fictional novel, you would believe it was real. And you would read it with fascination just to hear how it went on. But this was real! And that makes it even more remarkable, but also kind of depressing, because it shows the contradictoriness of war:
With honest great respect to your father, I disagree with Doug, because there are no heroes in war. War never breeds good, but yes, somehow we have to deal with it until it's over.
(Sorry for my bad ability to express myself in English. I'd love to comment in my native tongue, but who would understand either?)

10 January 2015 at 02:54

Blogger Peter Banks said...

Thanks, again, for posting, really appreciate your perspective. I have responded in more length to your other comment.

I hope that my father's writing does attain a wider audience yet, I realise that he, as a relative youngster of 21/22 years old, may have drawn some incorrect conclusions at the time!

Vielen Dank

12 January 2015 at 09:47

Anonymous Siegfried said...

Of course. In the retrospective you always know better. And in the end it's useless to say who was rigt and who was wrong. War is wrong in any way. The more I was touched standing in front of a memorial of young british fighters who died in Afghanistan these days.

I am glad for the German-British friendship. Let's strengthen Europe together!

(BTW: Sometimes I have a grin on my face, how the British try to keep their "island mind" alive.)

12 January 2015 at 23:07

Blogger Allan Breckell said...

Hi Peter, I am Allan Breckell, Grandson of the navigator in the above, John Adam Breckell 60077 1910 -1985. I was very close to my Grandfather and have gathered some of his history. We spoke often about the war and Darkie Parker his best friend and piolot, i have been informed your farther flew with him and been led to your blog.My Grandfather is Back Row 2nd from Right
And Noel parker ( Darkie) I believe is between your father and My grandfather.
allan "at" helpme.co.nz

24 February 2016 at 01:03

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