Time at War: A Memoir
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Average customer review:Product Description
Nicholas Mosley, son of Oswald Mosley and his first wife, is an admired novelist, most famous for ACCIDENT, filmed by Joseph Losey from a Harold Pinter screenplay and starring Dirk Bogarde. Although he has previously published an autobiography, Nicholas Mosley has hitherto avoided writing about his WWII experience, in which his tangled relationship with his father, Sir Oswald Mosley, leader of the British fascist movement, plays a major part. TIME AT WAR shows Mosley coming of age as a young officer in the forcing house of war and being despatched as part of the Rifle Brigade to join the allies as they fight their way up Italy. At one point he ignominiously loses most of his platoon. Eventually he leads his men to capture a strategic farmhouse not far from Monte Cassino and wins the MC. Mosley gives his account against the backdrop of being the son of Britain's fascist leader who was imprisoned with his second wife (Diana, one of the Mitford sisters) in Brixton jail not long after the outbreak of war. What would have happened if Nicholas had been captured by the Germans and then identified? In fact at one point in the Italian campaign this happens. How he survives demonstrates that fact can sometimes be more bizarre than fiction. TIME AT WAR is both an absorbing war memoir and intriguing account of a relationship unlike any other in WWII. How do you live your life when Britain is fighting the axis powers when your father is the self-proclaimed British fascist leader?
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #479111 in Books
- Published on: 2007-06-01
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 208 pages
Editorial Reviews
Sunday Telegraph
"His war story carries much irony and Mosley is quick to record its farcical moments as much as its horror...well worth reading"
Review
"His war story carries much irony and Mosley is quick to record its farcical moments as much as its horror...well worth reading" (Sunday Telegraph )
About the Author
Nicholas Mosley, born 1923, is the elder son of Sir Oswald Mosley and his first wife, lady Cynthia Curzon. He was educated at Eton and Balliol and served in the Rifle Brigade in WWII from 1942 rising to rank of Captain. His novels include Accident (filmed by Joseph Losey from a Harold Pinter script, with Dirk Bogarde), Hopeful Monsters (Whitbread Fiction Prize, 1990).
Customer Reviews
Time at War
In recent years the Italian campaign has come in for a lot of attention with several revisionist works contracting either around the whole campaign or the most notable battles such as Sicily, Monte Cassino and Anzio. However this is no revisionist work it is simply a story of one mans war [an officer in this case] in the 2nd Battalion the London Irish Rifles.
I must at first declare an interest in anything to do with the London Irish, since my grandfather fought with the Battalion through out the Africa campaign [with the 1st Army] and then on into Italy, rising to the rank of Company Sergeant Major in H Coy, before being wounded with his OC, Maj Desmond Woods [later Colonel], at Lake Trasimene. I have read every book about the battalion during this period from the London Irish at War to John Horsfall, Fling Our Banner to the wind.
So at first I read this book more out of duty than expectation, if you have not guessed already Nicholas Mosley is the son of Sir Oswald Mosley the leader of the British Union of Fascist. Sir Oswald Mosley still had quiet a few friends in the establishment even when in prison [these included Churchill] and this would make a very interesting book in itself, the establishment flirtation with fascism prior to the Second World War, but as they say that's another story. So the book takes us from the young Mosley education at Eton through the usual hoops and string pulling to a commission in the Rifle Brigade, and then to war. One of the driving reasons for him to seek a commission was to restore the family name. He arrives in Italy to find no Battalions of the Rifle Brigade in theatre so ends up in the only Rifle Regiment in action the London Irish.
The book is full of some very interesting observations about men in war and how they fight or don't in some cases. Reinforcing the observations of Marshall and Wigram he gives some first hand accounts of how all men reach there limit and often refuse or shirk the fight. Mosley laments his lack of training, none of which prepared him for actions on, the soldiers under your command refusing to fight or choosing to surrender rather than engage the enemy. Even today there is very little training for Officers in the circumstances that after coming up with your cunning plan what happens if the men under your command don't think it's such a good idea!
However I don't want you to get the wrong idea about this book the London Irish are not a bunch of cowards they where at the time a normal war-time Bn with the usual mix of men and emotions, and Mosley after evading capture goes on to win the MC with the battalion. Its just all men at some time reach there limit, its how you as a commander deal with that problem. Getting that man or men over there battle shock or fear and get them back into the fight as quickly as possible.
As it was, it was realised by all, that the London Irish and the 38th Irish Brigade had had a belly full and where taken back to Egypt for R&R where the battalion was involved in one of the greatest punch ups of the war in Cairo with the local population [the riot started because the men of the Bn/Bde felt they where being ripped off by the local traders], this led to them being despatch back to the front asp.
Lucky for Mosley [and the Coy] he came under the wing of a good Company Commander in Mervyn Davies [as only in the special environment that is the British Army where you have a Welsh-man in charge of a mostly Irish unit], Davies builds Esprit de Corps, adopts the Parachute Regt Battle-cry Woo-hoo Mahommet! [Unlikely to be used in today PC environment] and does a good job of steering the Coy through the campaign to its end in Austria facing Tito's Partisans. .
An interesting book, that should appeal not only to those like myself who have an interest in the London Irish and the Italian Campaign but those interested in men in battle and how to led men at the end of there tether.
G Long
Italian memories
I enjoyed reading this book, and would recommend it to those who have an interest in reading a personal account of the war time period in Italy during 1943 to 1945. Included in the book, there are also diarised items of communication between Nicholas Mosley and his family (particularly his famous father, Oswald) to add context and flavour to the range of emotions felt by Nicholas during the period.
As with the previous reviewer I, too, have an direct interest in reading of these wartime experiences in Italy as my father, Edmund, (who is still alive) was Colour Sergeant with "E" company of the 2nd Battalion London Irish Rifles (LIR), during the period contained within the book, and served with the LIR from October 1939 to March 1946, and served with Nicholas for some time of that period. As the author notes, it has taken over 60 years for him to recount the life threatening experiences he faced at that time, and it has also taken that time for my father to put pen to paper in a similar vein. This is hardly surprising given the tragedy of the loss of so many of their friends and comrades at such an early age, but this length of time does not dim the sense of immediacy in the narrative.
I read large sections of the book out to my father and whilst the specific emotions facing each in battle would likely have been quite different, the overall experience seem to ring very true to him. Their feelings during intense moments of danger seem similar, and I'm sure were wide spread amongst the majority : a real personal sense of not being heroic, as such, but of "merely" performing their job. Additionally, with personal pride uppermost in mind, how in extreme circumstances, men and women can achieve things beyond their perceived capability. In this context, many, which clearly including Nicholas, found their feet in battle, and displayed great courage in carrying out their assigned tasks. At the same time, how a sense of paralysing fear and inner feelings of possible personal inadequacy remained constant.
I was also interested in reading of the (not surprising with his background) sense of superiority Nicholas felt he had over the men he commanded - and then noting the change in his outlook as he gradually gained the confidence of his men, and as elements of mutual trust emerged. At this point, it's worth noting that there were large groups of educated men within the LIR 2nd Bttn (for example one company included a group of West End actors). Perception is key at all times, obviously.
Overall, I feel this is a valuable addition to words written on the subject of the great battles of the brutal (but under stated ) Italian theatre of war. There needs to be an ongoing testimony to those who stood bravely and fell, over 60 years ago.
Richard O'Sullivan
Aesthetic Rifle Brigade Musings
This is a memoir of war by someone who joined the Rifle Brigade in mid-WW2 straight from Eton. He later transferred to the London Irish Rifles. One of the amusing aspects is that Mosley (son of Sir Oswald and Lady Diana) started off affecting to be more or less gay, but by the end of the war had come to the firm conclusion that there were creatures called women around lol! Very funny but somewhat of a commentary on the effects of pre-WW2 British public school boarding education!
Mosley, despite trying hard (along with some of his men) not to be a hero (presumably on the basis that heroes "tend to crook it for other people") ends up being decorated for valour (again, along with some of the other officers and other ranks). In his case, the MC. He later goes to Austria before marrying and settling in the English countryside. The story finishes just after WW2, though he continued it in other memoirs later.
Although he does not stress the point, it is clear that he does think (as do many others, by the way, despite propaganda) that his father had a good point in trying to avoid war with Germany both in 1939 and after Dunkirk in 1940, before the main slaughter had started. I believe this author later had a major falling-out with Sir Oswald, after WW2. Sir Oswald was detained under Regulation 18b, in effect as a political prisoner, as was Lady Mosley (who, although it is not in the book, spent her first year in a cell under inches of icy water...long live freedom?...).
This book is a good read and is recommended, particularly at the used price on Amazon.


