Herbert A. Werner (1920–2013)
Author of Iron Coffins
About the Author
Works by Herbert A. Werner
The Battle Of The Atlantic 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Werner, Herbert Albert
- Birthdate
- 1920-05-13
- Date of death
- 2013-04-06
- Gender
- male
- Short biography
- U Boot Commander
- Nationality
- Germany
USA
Members
Reviews
Iron coffins;: A personal account of the German U-boat battles of World War II, by Herbert A. Werner
Hard on the heels of Admiral Doenitz, we have Iron Coffins, by Oberleutnant zur See Herbert Werner. Although Werner captained two U-boats near the end of the war, most of his career was spent as First Watch Officer on other U-boats.
No translator is credited – I assume Werner wrote in English. There are only so many ways to describe being depth charged while jammed in a steel cylinder with a bunch of equally scared young men and Werner has to do a lot of that. He must have kept his own log show more book – although the book was written in 1969, Werner has details about radio signals sent and received, the number of depth charges dropped, and so on – or maybe he made it up.
What interested me more than the combat stories was actually Werner’s shore life. He is unabashed about having “a girl in every port”; a more-or-less steady girlfriend in Berlin, plus chance encounters in Brest and Paris and Bergen, plus sailor’s brothels. I suppose that’s more or less natural under the circumstances. His infrequent home leaves are traumatic; each time Germany is more damaged and more shabby and further on the way to Götterdämmerung.
He’s also unabashed about being a patriotic German. He was never a Nazi but grieved at the death of Hitler. He has reason to be not very fond of the Allies – his entire family and his steady girlfriend were killed in air raids and he was thrown into a French POW camp after the war – but doesn’t show it much.
What I’d like to see in one of these German WWII memoirs is an account of how everybody fell for Hitler in the first place. There are some generalities of the form “He gave hope to a defeated Germany” but I don’t know of anybody who describes just what it was like to be – for example – 16 years old in 1933. What was so great about the supposedly spellbinding oratory? What did it feel like to take part in a Nuremberg rally? The closest thing I have, oddly enough, is Mom’s continuing hero worship of FDR – nothing she can really put her finger on but a sense that this was a great man who was going to accomplish great things.
I’ll have to reread Das Boot for comparison. show less
No translator is credited – I assume Werner wrote in English. There are only so many ways to describe being depth charged while jammed in a steel cylinder with a bunch of equally scared young men and Werner has to do a lot of that. He must have kept his own log show more book – although the book was written in 1969, Werner has details about radio signals sent and received, the number of depth charges dropped, and so on – or maybe he made it up.
What interested me more than the combat stories was actually Werner’s shore life. He is unabashed about having “a girl in every port”; a more-or-less steady girlfriend in Berlin, plus chance encounters in Brest and Paris and Bergen, plus sailor’s brothels. I suppose that’s more or less natural under the circumstances. His infrequent home leaves are traumatic; each time Germany is more damaged and more shabby and further on the way to Götterdämmerung.
He’s also unabashed about being a patriotic German. He was never a Nazi but grieved at the death of Hitler. He has reason to be not very fond of the Allies – his entire family and his steady girlfriend were killed in air raids and he was thrown into a French POW camp after the war – but doesn’t show it much.
What I’d like to see in one of these German WWII memoirs is an account of how everybody fell for Hitler in the first place. There are some generalities of the form “He gave hope to a defeated Germany” but I don’t know of anybody who describes just what it was like to be – for example – 16 years old in 1933. What was so great about the supposedly spellbinding oratory? What did it feel like to take part in a Nuremberg rally? The closest thing I have, oddly enough, is Mom’s continuing hero worship of FDR – nothing she can really put her finger on but a sense that this was a great man who was going to accomplish great things.
I’ll have to reread Das Boot for comparison. show less
A colourful account of one officer's service in the U-Boat arm. While not everything in it can be verified, as happening to him personally, Werner does provide a coherent account of the sea war, and its gradual increase in danger. So, I would quote it for background, but not as an academic reference for a specific mission.
Some incredible stories here. Sometimes fiction movies cram years of incidents into the course of perhaps a single day. This book gave me that same feeling—but it is true! How could one person survive all of this? The author's resolute claims of being apolitical, as he fights for the Nazis, strike me as suspicious, and perhaps I should be equally suspicious of the rest of the book. But it feels real, generally. The book loses some momentum in the second half.
Very good story of WWII German U-Boat action told by a former German Navy captain. Interesting to me as I've read several WWII accounts, but this is the first one I've read from the German perspective. A long read, but it is thorough and complete with appendices and a glossary of naval terms. Highly recommended.
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