When Bill Cheall joined up in April 1939, he could not have imagined the drama, trauma, rewards and anguish that lay in store. First and foremost a Green Howard, he saw the sharp end of the Nazi's Blitzkrieg and was evacuated exhausted. Next step, courtesy of the Queen Mary, was North Africa as part of Monty's 8th Army. After victory in Tunisia, the Sicily invasion followed. The Green Howards returned to England to be in the vanguard of the Normandy Landings on GOLD Beach (his colleague, Sergeant Major Stan Hollis won the only VC on 6 June and Bill Cheall was wounded). Once fit, Cheall returned to the war zone and finished the war as a Regimental Policeman in occupied Germany. Bill's many and varied experiences make fascinating reading. He tells his story with modesty, humility and humour. AUTHOR: Bill Cheall left school aged 14 and worked in the family grocery business. He died in 1999 at Cambridge. The Editor Paul Cheall, Bill's son, started a business selling car insurance on the internet and he is now semi-retired. SELLING POINTS: ? A superb soldier's memoir of WW2 ? Cheall saw near continuous action with the BEF (1940), North Africa and Sicily (1941-43), Normandy through to Nazi Germany (1944-45) ? Wounded and evacuated to the UK ILLUSTRATIONS: 16 pages b/w plates