Train to Nowhere
One Woman's War: Ambulance Driver, Reporter, Liberator
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Narrated by:
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Deryn Edwards
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By:
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Anita Leslie
About this listen
Train to Nowhere is a war memoir seen through the sardonic eyes of Anita Leslie, a funny and vivacious young woman who reports on her experiences with a dry humour, finding the absurd alongside the tragic.
Daughter of a baronet and first cousin once removed of Winston Churchill, she joined the Mechanised Transport Corps as a fully trained mechanic and ambulance driver during WWII, serving in Libya, Syria, Palestine, Italy, France and Germany. Ahead of her time, Anita bemoaned 'first-rate women subordinate to second-rate men' and, as the English army forbade women from serving at the front, joined the Free French Forces in order to do what she felt was her duty.
Writing letters in Hitler's recently vacated office and marching in the Victory parade contrast with observations of seeing friends murdered and a mother avenging her son by coldly shooting a prisoner of war. Unflinching and unsentimental, Train to Nowhere is a memoir of Anita's war, one that, long after it was written, remains poignant and relevant.
With a new introduction by Penny Perrick.
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Story
Sir Philip Gibbs served as one of five official British reporters during the First World War. In this book he relays the experiences of British soldiers and offers a detailed narrative of the events of World War I, while trying to draw broader conclusions about the nature of war and how it can be prevented in the future.
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An unusually worthwhile listen.
- By Alan on 08-19-18
By: Philip Gibbs
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Is Paris Burning?
- By: Larry Collins, Dominique Lapierre
- Narrated by: Grover Gardner
- Length: 15 hrs and 53 mins
- Unabridged
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Best-selling authors and renowned journalists Larry Collins and Dominique Lapierre spent three years researching this book, drawing on French Resistance radio messages, German military records, countless interviews, and secret correspondence between de Gaulle, Churchill, Roosevelt, and Eisenhower. Here they recreate the drama, the fervor, and the triumph that heralded one of the most dramatic events of our time. Is Paris Burning? reconstructs, in meticulous and riveting detail, the network of fateful events - day by day, moment by moment - that saved the City of Light.
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Necessary reading for fans of WWII and Paris history
- By K Parany on 10-10-23
By: Larry Collins, and others
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The Man Who Broke into Auschwitz
- A True Story of World War II
- By: Denis Avey, Rob Broomby
- Narrated by: James Langton
- Length: 9 hrs and 19 mins
- Unabridged
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The Man Who Broke into Auschwitz is the extraordinary true story of a British soldier who marched willingly into the notorious concentration camp, Buna-Monowitz, known as Auschwitz III. In the summer of 1944, Denis Avey was being held in a British POW labor camp, E715, near the site of Auschwitz III. He had heard of the brutality meted out to the prisoners there and he was determined to witness what he could.
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Great, great story
- By Anonymous User on 08-12-11
By: Denis Avey, and others
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China Marine
- An Infantryman's Life After World War II
- By: E. B. Sledge, Stephen E. Ambrose
- Narrated by: Dan John Miller
- Length: 5 hrs and 11 mins
- Unabridged
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Picking up where his previous memoir leaves off, Sledge, a young marine in the First Division, traces his company's movements and charts his own difficult passage to peace following his horrific experiences in the Pacific. He reflects on his duty in the ancient city of Peiping (now Beijing) and recounts the difficulty of returning to his hometown of Mobile, Alabama, and resuming civilian life haunted by the shadows of close combat.
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Is there any QC check on Audible?
- By PHSINV on 02-12-18
By: E. B. Sledge, and others
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Wounded: A New History of the Western Front in World War I
- By: Emily Mayhew
- Narrated by: Kelly Birch
- Length: 8 hrs and 48 mins
- Unabridged
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The number of soldiers wounded in World War I is, in itself, devastating: over 21 million military wounded, and nearly 10 million killed. On the battlefield, the injuries were shocking, unlike anything those in the medical field had ever witnessed. The bullets hit fast and hard, went deep, and took bits of dirty uniform and airborne soil particles in with them. Soldier after soldier came in with the most dreaded kinds of casualty: awful, deep, ragged wounds to their heads, faces, and abdomens.
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Simply Incredible
- By Austin Bow on 08-30-19
By: Emily Mayhew
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The Daughters of Mars
- By: Tom Keneally
- Narrated by: Jane Nolan
- Length: 18 hrs and 23 mins
- Unabridged
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Naomi and Sally Durance are daughters of a dairy farmer from the Macleay Valley. Bound together in complicity by what they consider a crime, when the Great War begins in 1914 they hope to submerge their guilt by leaving for Europe to nurse the tides of young wounded. They head for the Dardanelles on the hospital ship Archimedes. Their education in medicine, valour, and human degradation continues on the Greek island of Lemnos, then on the Western Front. Here, new outrages - gas, shell-shock - present themselves.
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Interesting WWI novel with an Australian bent
- By Sarah Gamp on 03-09-13
By: Tom Keneally
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Covenant with Death
- By: John Harris
- Narrated by: Mike Rogers
- Length: 14 hrs and 55 mins
- Unabridged
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They joined for their country. They fought for each other. When war breaks out in 1914, Mark Fenner and his Sheffield friends immediately flock to Kitchener's call. Amid waving flags and boozy celebration, the three men - Fen, his best friend Locky and self-assured Frank, rival for the woman Fen loves - enlist as volunteers to take on the Germans and win glory.
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A superb Great War historical novel
- By Jean on 09-28-14
By: John Harris
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The Race for Paris
- By: Meg Waite Clayton
- Narrated by: Jennifer Ikeda
- Length: 9 hrs and 50 mins
- Unabridged
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Normandy, 1944. To cover the fighting in France, Jane, a reporter for the Nashville Banner, and Liv, an Associated Press photographer, have already had to endure enormous danger and frustrating obstacles - including strict military regulations limiting what woman correspondents can do. Even so, Liv wants more. Encouraged by her husband, the editor of a New York newspaper, she's determined to be the first photographer to reach Paris with the Allies.
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Breathtaking
- By Jane Wilson on 08-14-15
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Leningrad
- The Epic Siege of World War II, 1941-1944
- By: Anna Reid
- Narrated by: Peter Drew
- Length: 15 hrs
- Unabridged
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On September 8, 1941, 11 weeks after Hitler's brutal surprise attack on the Soviet Union, Leningrad was surrounded. The German siege was not lifted for two and a half years, by which time some three quarters of a million Leningraders had died of starvation.
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Very Good Look at the History We Were Not Taught
- By Chris Reich on 01-27-14
By: Anna Reid
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Naples '44
- By: Norman Lewis
- Narrated by: Nicholas Boulton
- Length: 6 hrs and 40 mins
- Unabridged
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Naples '44 is an unflinching autobiographical account of a year in Naples after the armistice and Allied landings in Sorrento in 1943. Working as a British counterintelligence officer under the Allied occupation, Lewis documents the rich pageant of life in the city and its surrounding areas. There is suffering and squalor: Criminal gangs are on the rise, along with typhus and black market commerce, and the female population is forced into part-time prostitution. But there is farce and humor, too, witnessed in the Roman uncle paid handsomely simply to appear at funerals.
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Sharply observed, beautifully written, and deeply humane
- By cw on 11-13-23
By: Norman Lewis
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The Unwomanly Face of War
- An Oral History of Women in World War II
- By: Svetlana Alexievich, Richard Pevear - translator, Larissa Volokhonsky - translator
- Narrated by: Julia Emelin, Yelena Shmulenson
- Length: 14 hrs and 18 mins
- Unabridged
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In The Unwomanly Face of War, Alexievich chronicles the experiences of the Soviet women who fought on the front lines, on the home front, and in the occupied territories. These women - more than a million in total - were nurses and doctors, pilots, tank drivers, machine-gunners, and snipers. They battled alongside men, and yet, after the victory, their efforts and sacrifices were forgotten.
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the best book about war I've ever read
- By Swarmy Barnacles on 10-06-17
By: Svetlana Alexievich, and others
What listeners say about Train to Nowhere
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Jean
- 09-06-17
An Absorbing Memoir
This book was first published in 1948. Anita Theodosia Moira Leslie (Nov 21, 1914-Nov 5, 1985) was born in Ireland and was the daughter of a baronet and a cousin of Winston Churchill via his mother. Jennie Churchill was Anita’s great aunt. Anita followed many of her peers in volunteering for active service in World War II. She served in the mechanized Transport Corp as a mechanic and ambulance driver. (Princess Elizabeth also served as mechanic and ambulance driver but had to stay in England). Anita served in the Middle East and Egypt and then in Italy, Northern France and Germany. She was award the Croix de Guerre, the French Military Award given to foreign military personnel who served in France during WWII. Her family was friends with General Alexander so whenever they were in the same area she always had either lunch or dinner with him. Because of her family status, she moved in the upper circles in the Middle Eastern countries where she was stationed. I found her discussion of Palmyra, Syria interesting as the archeologist gave her a tour. I thought her descriptions of Aleppo, Homs and Damascus were most interesting considering what has happened to these cities today. I found her discussion about meeting with Churchill at Checkers when she was returning to France after visiting her ill mother most fascinating.
The memoir is well written in the style of writing typical of the era and displays the typical “stiff upper lip” of the British. As an ambulance driver, she saw many of the horrors of war. She said the worst was Nordhausen Concentration Camp. She was assigned to evacuate the surviving prisoners. Some of the desensitization from war comes through in the writing. This is a common factor to anyone who has seen and lived through the horrors of war. Leslie spoke several languages and was fluent in French.
Anita Leslie went on after the war to become a prolific author and biographer. She wrote over seventeen books several of them about the Churchills. She wrote “Jennie: The Life of Lady Randolph Churchill” and “The Marlborough House”.
The book was nine and a half hours long. Deryn Edwards does a good job narrating the book. Edwards studied at the Guildhall school of Music and the Royal Academy of Music. She is a singer and audiobook narrator.
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