
‘Young Man - You’ll Never Die’
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Narrated by:
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Roger Clark
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By:
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Merton Naydler
About this listen
Merton Naydler joined the RAF at the age of 19 and served for the next six years until May 1946. He flew Spitfires and Hurricanes during a tour of duty that took him to North Africa, Burma, and Malaya. This extremely entertaining memoir portrays wartime life in the desert environment where sand and flies and life under canvas made living and flying a daunting experience.
When the author was posted to Burma he was filled with "a deep and genuine dread." After a long uncomfortable trip, he joined 11 Squadron and was now faced with Japanese Zeroes in combat over dense tropical jungle rather than Bf 109s over a barren desert terrain. "Daytime flying was hot as hell, the humidity intense"- the author's description of his new posting that goes on to describe life in "Death Valley", named because of the likeliness of falling victim to tropical disease rather than enemy aircraft. This is the story of a sergeant pilot who learned his trade the hard way, in action over Africa and then honed his combat skills in the skies over Japanese-held tropical forests where he was eventually commissioned.
©2005 Merton Naydler (P)2018 TantorFascinating Account
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Passionate observation
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Beautifully written and keenly observed
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The narrator was mostly good, making the work sound like the reminiscences of a man looking back in time to an earlier, well-remembered, phase of his life. But he has some very quirky personal pronunciations, which I found distracting: "levver" rather than "lever", "war-rior" rather than "warrior", and "say-lon" for "Ceylon". No doubt other place-names were similarly mangled. He also pronounced the "bow" in "bow wave" as if it were an archery bow rather than something a performer would do to acknowledge applause.
Really interesting memoir
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It’s about his life and experiences during WW2 from signing up through to VJ Day. Starting in England, moving to North Africa, Sicily, Middle East and the Far East.
There are examples and descriptions of missions, including bombing Japanese forces using a Hurricane.
It would have been interesting had it been a wee bit longer to include what happened to the author after being de-mobbed through to the time of writing of the book.
WW2 generation had amazing lives
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Interesting book not what I expected
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My uncle was almost certainly one of his contemporaries in the desert doing the same job. So it was interesting to hear what he was probably thinking too and what life in the desert was like for Sqadron Pilots.
My Father and Father in law were both in Burma until the end and may have been on that same Sunderland with him. It goes a long way to explains certain character traits I recognise as common to those who came home damaged men and had to rebuild their lives when they had known nothing but death and kill or be killed.
The narrator obviously had instructions to pronounce things for the American Market which is a shame for such a British story. Just let the anachronisms wash over you and enjoy a very thoughtful book.
A very interesting story.
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Different kind of war memories
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A true insight to the realities of wartime life
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Heart breaking, horrifying and wonderful
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