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Abundance of Valor

Resistance, Survival, and Liberation: 1944-45

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The operation known as “Market Garden”—made famous in the book and film A Bridge Too Far—was the largest airborne assault in history up to that time, a high-risk Allied invasion of enemy territory that has become a legend of World War II, even as it still invites criticism from historians. Now a thrilling and revelatory new book re-creates the operation as never before, revealing for the first time the full adventures of the bold “Jedburgh” paratroopers whose exploits were almost unimaginably risky and heroic.
Kicked off on September 17, 1944, Market Garden was intended to secure crucial bridges in the Nazi-occupied Netherlands by a parachute assault conducted by three Allied airborne divisions. Capture of the bridges would allow a swift advance and crossing of the Rhine by British ground forces. Jedburgh teams—Allied Special Forces—were dropped into the Netherlands to train and use the Dutch resistance in support of the larger operation. Based on new firsthand testimony of survivors and declassified documents, Abundance of Valor concentrates on the three teams that operated farthest behind enemy lines, the nine men whose treacherous missions resulted in deaths, captures, and hair-breadth escapes.
Here in unprecedented detail are the heat and stench of fuel, oil, and sweat in the troop carriers going over, the remarkable (and misleading) initial success of the daylight parachute landings, and the deadly, brutally effective German response, particularly by crack SS armored units in the blood-soaked town of Arnhem. Abundance of Valor portrays with stunning verisimilitude the experiences of Lt. Harvey Allan Todd, who fought from a surrounded position against overwhelming numbers of the enemy before surviving capture, near-starvation, interrogation, and solitary confinement in German POW camps, and Maj. John “Pappy” Olmsted, who made a hazardous journey, in disguise, from safe house to safe house through enemy territory until finally reaching friendly lines.
With piercing criticism of the mission’s ultimate failure from faulty use of intelligence—and Field Marshall Montgomery’s distrust of the Dutch underground—Abundance of Valor is a brutally honest and truly inspiring account of fighting men in a noble cause who did their jobs with extraordinary honor and courage.
 
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 11, 2010
      Allied special operations units fight and flounder in the ill-fated Market-Garden offensive in this colorful but unfocused WWII picaresque. Former Special Forces fighter Irwin (The Jedburghs
      ) recounts the exploits of three-man “Jedburgh Teams” sent into German-occupied Holland to organize Dutch resistance fighters in support of General Montgomery’s infamous “bridge too far” debacle. The author focuses on two Americans: Lt. Harvey Allan Todd, who was taken prisoner by the Germans at Arnheim, and Maj. John Olmsted, who organized a secret intelligence network behind enemy lines. There’s not much shape or significance to these largely unrelated plot lines, which concern some of the most ill-conceived and useless operations of the war. Olmsted lost important enemy plans; in Todd’s case, an American rescue force is captured by the Germans and imprisoned in the very POW camp it was supposed to liberate. Still, the author vividly recounts many varieties of WWII experience: blood-and-guts combat set pieces; a tense espionage thriller; and a harrowing captivity narrative. Irwin’s angle on the oft-told Market-Garden fiasco doesn’t make for a grand epic, just a collection of well-told war stories. Photos, 4 maps.

    • Kirkus

      February 15, 2010
      Any history of Operation Market-Garden, the September 1944 Allied airborne assault behind German lines has two strikes against it—masterful accounts by Cornelius Ryan and Martin Middlebrook.

      Fortunately, readers of this book will quickly discover that military historian Irwin (The Jedburghs: The Secret History of the Allied Special Forces, France 1944, 2005) uses the operation as background. Mostly, this is the story of small, highly trained three-man bands who accompanied the assault to organize Dutch resistance forces and then lead them in a campaign of sabotage and intelligence gathering. The airborne assault failed catastrophically, and Irwin follows the fortunes of several bands who remained behind or found themselves caught up in the debacle. The author concentrates on two Americans. Lt. Harvey Todd, captured after fighting with the British, underwent a miserable seven-month tour of German POW camps before, starved and injured, he escaped and reached Allied lines as the Reich collapsed in spring 1945. Maj. John Olmsted's group avoided the fighting and set up an extensive resistance organization that gathered intelligence for the Allies. In November 1944, carrying a knapsack full of intelligence papers, he joined a group of more than 100 Allied soldiers and airmen attempting to escape to Allied lines. It was a fiasco; only a few succeeded, but Olmsted, minus his knapsack, was among them. Both men kept diaries and, being intelligence agents, underwent extensive debriefing, so the fact that their adventures were unrelated and inflicted little damage on the Nazis takes a backseat to the mass of juicy, detailed and unfamiliar material ably provided by Irwin.

      Massive World War II fireworks and individual heroism that accomplished little but makes for an entertaining read.

      (COPYRIGHT (2010) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

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  • English

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