This book recounts in great detail the three bloody years which led up to the Downing Street declaration. It was a time of hope, punctuated by appalling acts of savagery by Republicans and Loyalists alike. The Frizzell’s bombing, the Greysteel massacre, the machine-gun attacks on several Catholic-frequented betting shops are but a few of the outrages carried out by bloodthirsty and undoubtedly evil paramilitaries. The author refuses to keep quiet as Sinn Fein and its apologists in the British Labour Party attempt to re-write the history of the troubles.
Ken Wharton Libri
Questo scrittore inglese, ex soldato britannico, narra il violento conflitto religioso e politico in Irlanda del Nord noto come The Troubles attraverso una serie di libri di saggistica. La sua opera è una storia orale, basata su resoconti di prima mano di soldati di ogni grado che prestarono servizio durante l'Operazione Banner, nonché sulle sue esperienze personali di due turni in Irlanda del Nord. Attraverso queste testimonianze, svela la complessità e la dimensione umana di uno dei conflitti più duraturi della storia moderna. Il suo stile è diretto e privo di orpelli, privilegiando l'autenticità della narrazione.






A Long Long War: Voices from the British Army in Northern Ireland 1969-98
- 523pagine
 - 19 ore di lettura
 
Bloody Belfast
- 360pagine
 - 13 ore di lettura
 
A history of the war with the IRA through the eyes of the soldiers who experienced it
A vital examination of Northern Ireland fifty years since the start of the Troubles, focusing on the events of 1969
Cut off from Earth for over a century, the people of Mandala have created a unique society and developed religious beliefs and cultural customs that are completely their own. Now, word has come that thousands of colonists are en route from Earth. Fearing a crippling shift in the planet's balance, the Prime Minister vows to do whatever it takes to keep them away.
This is Ken Wharton's second oral history of the Northern Ireland troubles told again from the perspective of the ordinary British soldier. This book looks deeper into the conflict, utilizing stories from new contributors providing revealing and long-forgotten stories of the troubles from the back streets of the Ardoyne to the bandit country of South Armagh. Ken Wharton - himself a former soldier - is now known and trusted by those who served and they are keen for their part in Britain's forgotten war to now be made public. For the first time, he tells the stories of the 'unseen victims' - the loved ones who sat and dreaded a knock at the door from the Army telling them that their loved one had been killed on the streets of Northern Ireland. There are more first hand accounts from the Rifleman, the Private, the Guardsman, the Driver, the Sapper, the Fusilier on the street as they recall the violence, the insults and the shock of seeing a comrade dying in the street in front of them. There is an explosive interview with a soldier who killed an IRA gunman who was fresh from the murder of two Royal Artillerymen. Building on the huge success of Ken's first book, this second volume will provide plenty of new material for the reader to reconsider afresh the role of Britain's soldiers in Northern Ireland.
Wasted Years Wasted Lives, Volume 1
- 430pagine
 - 16 ore di lettura
 
Continues: Sir, they're taking the kids indoors: the British Army in Northern Ireland, 1973-74. 2012.
'Sir, They'Re Taking the Kids Indoors'
- 362pagine
 - 13 ore di lettura
 
Continued by: Wasted years, wasted lives. 2013-2014.
The Bloodiest Year is written with passion and a detailed knowledge in particular of Belfast and the experience of the ordinary squaddie on the streets. The Troubles have become Britain's forgotten war and so long as he is able, Ken will do his best to keep the memory of Operation Banner alive.