


(as of Feb 17, 2025 06:33:28 UTC – Details)
One of the last German veterans of World War II recounts his wartime experiences – with the harrowing directness of someone who stood amid the firestorm.
Hans Hoeller joined the war in 1941 and was trained as a tank hunter. After his first assignment to North Africa he returned to Germany for officer´s training. Once again, he deployed to the desert to take part in the last battles of the Wehrmacht in Tunisia. Badly wounded in close combat, he was lucky enough to be evacuated by plane – right in time to help rebuilding 21st Panzer Division in Northern France.
Hans recounts feverishly waiting for the Allied landing. As it finally came, he saw months of intense fighting, north of Caen, in the Falaise pocket and covering the Wehrmacht`s retreat to the east. Hans` war formally ended in late 1944, when he was taking prisoner and shipped to the USA. However, the war insight him rages on to this very day. He wrote this memoire to come to terms with that time. To give a name to all those soldiers who had died next to him, under his command, or even because of his actions. He hopes that never again shall our children and grandchildren face each other in the trenches – that the bloodshed remains in the past alone.
What awaits the reader:
Never will I forget how my father came home time and again, feeling so ashamed and desperate he did not have the heart to tell my mother that he had lost yet another job. Of course, she would register and start crying. And me, the little nipper, would play around them, anxious to cheer them up. Back then I swore to myself that I would do anything to change these conditions when I grew up.
What had landed on me were the mutilated remains of my sergeant. His right side was unrecognizable. Everywhere blood streamed out of his torn-up body. We had to move away if we wanted to survive. I looked around; we were no more than ten to twelve men. Without further thinking I drew my pistol and yelled “Assault, forward!”
I was rudely awoken by somebody shaking my shoulder. I blinked and looked at my watch; it was just after midnight on 6th June 1944. My trusted runner was standing at my bedside, reporting in a low voice, “Lieutenant, sir, enemy paratroopers have landed along the coast forward of our location.” So, this was it, I thought. The enemy had finally set foot in Normandy.
About the author
Hans Hoeller was born in 1921, in Pottschach, Austria. He served as a tank hunter at Tobruk, Halfaya Pass, Tunisia, Normandy, Falaise and in Eastern France. He was awarded the Iron CrossClass I and II for his actions. After the war, Hans Hoeller became an engineer and had a successful business career.
From the Publisher
A true story, that you can’t put down
The largest amphibious invasion in the history of warfare…
An officer and his men waiting feverishly for it to beginn…
A tragedy from which there was no escape…
The author
Hans Hoeller was born in 1921, in Pottschach, Austria. He served as a tank hunter at Tobruk, Halfaya Pass, Tunisia, Normandy (e.g. Pegasus Bridge, Caen), Falaise and in Eastern France. He was awarded the Iron Cross Class I and II for his actions. Wounded twice, he survived the war and wrote his memoirs, originally published under the title “Unter Rommels Kommando”.
After the war, Hans Hoeller became an engineer and had a successful business career. He used to visit his former areas of deployment many times. In 2014, he had the honor of participating in a commemoration ceremony of British Paratroopers on the grounds of the Merville Gun Battery, Normandy.
(Pic: Hans Hoeller in April, 2022)
The book
Hans Hoeller wrote his World War II memoirs to come to terms with that time. To give a name to all those soldiers who had died next to him, under his command, or even because of his actions. To deliver to posterity how it came that a generation of young Germans vigorously plunged themselves into ruin, even cheering for each other in free fall until finally, facing gravity, they hit the ground and got torn apart without remorse.
He hopes that this time remains in the past alone. And he wishes for a world in which we are allowed to maintain the memorials of war in reverence, without ever having to build new ones.
(Pic: Lt. Hans Hoeller, Benouville, June 7, 1944)
ASIN : B09WJ3TH1Y
Language : English
File size : 18576 KB
Simultaneous device usage : Unlimited
Text-to-Speech : Enabled
Screen Reader : Supported
Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
X-Ray : Not Enabled
Word Wise : Enabled
Print length : 280 pages