A Soldier's Story
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''This captivating account . . . is the story of an ordinary
soldier, but an extraordinary man. I commend this book most
warmly.''Richard Dannatt, General The Lord Dannatt GCB CBE MC DL,
Chief of the General Staff 2006-9''The amazing account of a young
man, Neville ''Timber'' Wood, who, despite fighting in many of the
major engagements of the Second World War, including Dunkirk, El
Alamein and D-Day, survived to become a much-loved husband and
father . . . brilliantly written . . . I highly recommend
it''Eleanor TomlinsonThe son of a Hull butcher, Neville ''Timber''
Wood volunteered in 1939, at the age of eighteen, to join the
British Army''s Tyne-Tees 50th Northumbrian Division. Timber was in
many ways an entirely unremarkable soldier - he won no medals for
gallantry, though he exhibited conspicuous bravery day after day,
for years, and he rose no higher through the ranks than Lance
Corporal. Nonetheless, he had an extraordinary war. As a driver for
the Royal Army Service Corps, Timber''s job was to get ammunition
and high explosives to the front line. It was a job with a high
casualty rate, sometimes higher than front-line troops. The 50th
Division was the principal fighting division of the British Army in
the Second World War. Four men of the 50th were awarded Victoria
Crosses, more than any other division. It was last off the beach at
Dunkirk and the first back on it on D-Day; the division was at the
heart of El Alamein and the major actions which followed; it took
part in the invasion of Sicily and fought all the way from Normandy
to Germany, where Timber saw first-hand the horrors of the
Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. Timber''s story is pretty much
the British war experience from the point of view of an ordinary
soldier. He was even captured, saw Rommel and escaped. This book,
written by his son Mike, is based on Neville''s extensive wartime
diaries and original documents he retained from the war as well as
on long conversations between the two of them when Mike transcribed
the diaries as a gift for his father in 2006. Timber died in 2015.