PRESS RELEASE 2.17.14
THE SHELBURNE ESCAPE
LINE
Anacortes author Réanne
Hemingway-Douglass announces the release of her new book: The Shelburne Escape Line – Secret Rescues of Allied Aviators by the
French Resistance, Britain’s Royal Navy and London’s MI-9. A lifelong Francophile, Réanne tells the true
story of the Shelburne Line, a secret escape route for Allied aviators stranded
in WWII France, and the only line not infiltrated by the Gestapo. The book pays
tribute to the audacity and heroism of the French Resistance members and Allied
military and intelligence personnel who made the escapes possible. It also
recounts the experiences of some of the numerous Allied airmen who were shot
down over Occupied France. Réanne brings a personal touch to these histories, as many of the people
she writes about are her friends.
Anacortes, Washington,
March 1, 2014:
Anacortes author Réanne Hemingway-Douglass announces the release of her new
book: The Shelburne Escape Line – Secret
Rescues of Allied Aviators by the French Resistance, Britain’s Royal Navy and
London’s MI-9. A lifelong Francophile, Réanne tells the true story of the Shelburne Line, a
secret escape route for Allied aviators stranded in WWII France, and the only
line not infiltrated by the Gestapo.
As
Réanne’s book recounts, the Shelburne was one of the later escape lines that
operated within Nazi-occupied Europe. It was established at the end of 1943 by
two agents who worked for MI-9, the British military intelligence agency
responsible for providing assistance to Allied servicemen stranded behind enemy
lines. Working with the French Resistance, these agents arranged for groups of
Allied airmen to be taken from 'safe houses' in Paris to a small town in Brittany,
where the men were hidden by local volunteers until a Royal Navy motor gunboat
was able to pick them up from a secluded beach and take them back to England. A
total of 121 Allied airmen and nine French agents were rescued from beneath the
noses of German sentries on the cliffs above, in eight audacious evacuation operations
conducted between January and August, 1944. Though the risk of betrayal
remained ever present, the Shelburne Line was never infiltrated by the Gestapo.
The
second part of the book comprises personal stories of airmen and other
individuals who were loosely affiliated with the Shelburne Line or were
otherwise caught up in the war in France. Some were American pilots whose
bomber aircraft were damaged by flak or enemy fighters, obliging them to seek
emergency landing fields or bail out with their crews over France. Two stories
are about young French people, longtime friends of the author, who were unable
to join the fight for their homeland but were marked for life—literally in one
case—by the happenstance of being citizens of a country at war. These are
intimate accounts that pay tribute to the heroism and courage of ‘ordinary’
people, while reinforcing the fact that war touches everybody.
The
Shelburne Escape Line will be available through local bookstores, and online as an
e-Book in Kindle, Kobo and other versions.
Praise for Réanne
Hemingway-Douglass and The Shelburne Escape Line:
Even now, there still remain
WWII stories most of us have not yet heard. The Shelburne Escape Line
is one of the most poignant and includes Luftwaffe fighters attacking Allied
bombers, air crews trapped behind enemy lines, secret agents and audacious
midnight rescues. Finally revealed are extraordinary examples of ingenuity and
quiet heroism on the part of ‘ordinary’ people.
- Maj. Gen. John D. Altenburg, Jr., US
Army (Ret.)
Réanne Hemingway-Douglass has
brought her impressive scholarly and translation abilities to an inspiring
corner of World War II history. Her achievement is all the more remarkable
because this aspect of the French Resistance was deliberately covert and
secret. This book adds a thrilling chapter to the story of the fight for
freedom.
-
Roderick
Nash, Emiritus Professor of History, UC Santa Barbara
Réanne is a world-class sailor,
author, explorer and Francophile. Her translations, scholarship, interviews of
Allied aviators are exemplary. Do I smell a movie here?
-
Warren
Miller, author, ski filmmaker, humorist and university lecturer
About the author:
Réanne Hemingway-Douglass is a
French-speaking American who has considered France her "second
country" since she spent a year in Grenoble as a college student in the
1950s. A writer,
editor, cyclist, sailor, and language teacher, her
articles on bicycling, cruising, and women's issues have appeared in numerous
outdoor magazines. Her book Cape Horn:
One Man’s Dream, One Woman’s Nightmare is a classic in nautical survival
literature. She and her husband Don have also published numerous nautical
guidebooks and maps covering areas from Baja California to the Gulf of Alaska.
The Douglasses live on Fidalgo Island, in Washington State.