An insult to veterans and to it's readers

Vladd67

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Jun 10, 2007
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I have just had the misfortune to read OP JB by Christopher Creighton. How this man has the nerve to claim this pile of **** is a true story is beyond belief. It is nothing but an insult to the people who served in WWII and an insult to the intelligence of it's readers. If you have any interest and knowledge of WWII for the sake of your blood pressure stay clear of this trash. I'd rather read Speer's self serving whine that is Inside The Third Reich again than go anywhere near this book.
 
Just a short extract from one of the readers' reviews on Amazon:
The only thing I was surprised by was that there was no reference to Nazi bases on the moon, or crashed UFO technology being used by the author...
which perhaps gives an indication of what the book does contain.
 
Luckily I picked it up at a car boot sale so I only wasted 25p
 
Anything that says "fact or fiction?" is usually fiction. Also, I hate those kind of books anyways...and on an unrelated icecream flavored note: lol @ the tavistock comments on Amazon...tavistock is not the new age illuminati....
 
And if you read the reviews, you can see the account of the surviving children of Peter Hartley, and realise the lengths some writers will go to, to make money out of trash like this. Luckily Hartley's offspring were eminently sensible, and refused to have anything to do with it; would have only provided publicity for the book.

If you google 'Martin Boormann's body found' and go to the BBC News item, you'll see that DNA evidence has identified Boorman as the body found in the tunnels in 1972. I think (someone correct me) that DNA evidence has a one in 5,000,000 chance of correctly identifying someone, but it is higher than that when using direct family members (as they did in the Boorman case).

Probably anyone mentioned in the book could sue the **** out of the publishers and the author, and they'd deserve it IMHO!
 
I'd rather read Speer's self serving whine that is Inside The Third Reich again than go anywhere near this book.

Ah, yes. I especially liked his descriptions of how he and his wife were so dedicated to nature and the outdoors. What a guy!:p
 

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