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The Worst Journey: Life and death aboard the Royal Navy's Arctic convoys, 1941-5

John Lewis-Stempel

9 Reviews

Rated 0

Arctic Ocean, Biography, Prose: non-fiction, History, Second World War, Naval forces & warfare

The 10,000 sailors, the 'Few of the Sea', who sailed in the Royal Navy's Second World War Arctic convoys offered a lifeline to Russia during its life-or-death struggle with Nazi Germany and won what was probably the least-appreciated major victory of the war.

During the terrible voyage, from the extreme north-west of Scotland to Russia's Arctic coast, the sailors faced 50- and even 100-foot waves, icebergs and hurricane-force winds. Such winds could peel the steel shields from the ships' guns and regularly blew men overboard. In summer, Oerlikon gunners would be at their guns for twenty hours a day; in the winter they often froze to death.

Even when the convoys reached Murmansk or Archangel there was no respite. Murmansk was about 25 miles from the front, which meant that there were enemy raids all day and food was short.

Despite all this the Royal Navy stuck to the convoys for four years, supplying Russia with planes, oil and other vital material, but, more importantly, by reassuring Stalin of Britain's commitment, the men of the Arctic convoys succeeded in keeping Russia in the war.

This is a book about the men of the convoys, about life aboard ship, drawing extensively on letters, diaries and reports, many from previously unpublished archives, as well as new interviews with the last surviving veterans.

The Worst Journey shadows the experience of the sailors on the seventy-eight Arctic convoys: from enlistment, through training, joining a ship, shore leave, action and death - or survival - at sea. It follows the fortunes of twenty-five sailors drawn from the bottom, middle and top of the navy's ranks. A sailor's position aboard ship played a critical role in whether he survived an attack or sinking, depending on where the ship was hit, or holed.

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Praise for The Worst Journey: Life and death aboard the Royal Navy's Arctic convoys, 1941-5

  • Praise for Six Weeks

  • Best research resource ever. Beautiful book

  • Compelling

  • This well researched book tells the harrowing story of the men - or adolescents, many of them - who unhesitatingly answered the call by War Minister Lord Kitchener for volunteers, and continued to answer it even after it became clear that the life expectancy of a subaltern in the trenches averaged only six weeks . . . Lewis-Stempel is excellent on life in the trenches . . . for all the horror and pity of their struggle, their legacy is our freedom. - Mail on Sunday

  • It is only rarely that a book deserves to be recommended unreservedly but John Lewis-Stempel's Six Weeks falls firmly into that category . . . This is a book that should be read by every young man who aspires to serve as an officer in the Army; it will educate him about how to behave in command of soldiers and about how to face the perils of war. - Guards Magazine

  • Woven with great narrative skill . . . presents an incomparable portrait of a generation. - Military Times

  • A superb study . . . Lewis-Stempel's marvelously evocative book is full of throat-catching moments . . . The result is the most moving single book on the Great War that I have ever read - and I have read many . . . his book pays the subalterns the respect they deserve by entering into their distant mindsets. - Literary Review

  • Diaries and letters convey the inspiring spirit of these young men. - Sunday Telegraph

  • A hugely moving account. - Oxford Times

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John Lewis-Stempel

John Lewis-Stempel is a farmer and 'Britain's finest living nature writer' (The Times). His books include the Sunday Times bestsellers Woodston, The Running Hare and The Wood. He is the only person to have won the Wainwright Prize for Nature Writing twice, with Meadowland and Where Poppies Blow. In 2016 he was named Magazine Columnist of the Year for his column in Country Life. He farms cattle, sheep, pigs and poultry. Traditionally.

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