Book review: Another River, Another Town
This book is a little gem. Not about a paratrooper this time, but about an 18 year old tank gunner at the end of the war. The author Jack Irwin recounts his experience with a tank crew. He arrived in the ETO in August 44, and the story is completely set in March and April 1945, when their unit slugs through Germany, all the way to Dessau near Berlin. The Germans still fight over each little town and Jack quickly learns the reality of combat.
I couldn’t help but see the similarities with the movie ‘Fury‘, which may have been partially based on this book. The author vividly brings to life some of the other crew and unit members, most notably the ever intoxicated tank driver.
At some point, their M4 Sherman is destroyed and their crew is issued the only M26 Super Pershing in the ETO at that time. Like the normal M26, it had the new 90mm cannon, but with a longer barrel. And more importantly, extra frontal armor. This extra protection did save the crew and tank in several engagements in the book.
At 170 pages, it’s a light read, and you will be absorbed by it, and sucked through it in no time. John Irwin is a gifted storyteller. In a short few months between arriving in Germany with no idea of anything, and the German capitulation, the author became a teenage seasoned combat veteran.
Next review: ‘Battle of the Bulge’ volumes 1-3 by Stackpole Books.
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