
Marie-Louise Osmont
Author of The Normandy Diary of Marie-Louise Osmont: 1940-1944
Works by Marie-Louise Osmont
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Osmont, Marie-Louise
- Birthdate
- 1890
- Gender
- female
- Occupations
- Diarist
- Nationality
- France
- Associated Place (for map)
- France
Members
Reviews
This is an incredible account of the Normandy invasion. If you ever wondered about the people caught between two armies, here is one terrible version. If her house had been bombed, we might never have seen this story. She lived in Normandy, near Caen, very close to the front line. She housed German soldiers for a long time, then as they retreated she billeted English soldiers. She lived with continual bombing and the noises of nearby cannon and tank fire for about 2 months. And then
Told show more without histrionics, or self-pity, if this book were required reading for students world wide, it would show once again, the utter stupidity of war and aggression.
Toward the end she writes "It won't be long before Periers returns to its solitude, and that will perhaps be sad from several points of view: one will be stuck here with nothing but the pitiful inhabitants of the place."
And with farm fields destroyed, animals killed, houses and barns leveled or nearly leveled, the inhabitants are indeed pitiful. show less
Told show more without histrionics, or self-pity, if this book were required reading for students world wide, it would show once again, the utter stupidity of war and aggression.
Toward the end she writes "It won't be long before Periers returns to its solitude, and that will perhaps be sad from several points of view: one will be stuck here with nothing but the pitiful inhabitants of the place."
And with farm fields destroyed, animals killed, houses and barns leveled or nearly leveled, the inhabitants are indeed pitiful. show less
Library book.
This amazing diary begins with an entry dated August 6, 1940: "First occupation of the Château de Périers by the Germans; altogether, two non-commissioned officers and four enlisted men." The diary goes on with a few entries for 1940, 1942, and 1943 as the occupation by German troops escalated and the château and its grounds were taken over by provisions, tanks, foxholes, and trenches. Marie-Louise, a fifty-year old widow is allowed to live in one room of the château. This show more is not a large château, but rather what might be thought of as a manor house.
The diary really picks up in February 1944 and from that point on there are nearly daily entries covering events leading up to D-Day, the departure of the Germans, and the occupation of the property by British troops. The final entry is for August 17, 1944.
The village of Périers is located about three miles inland from the beaches of the D-Day invasion, about midway between Caen and the coast. It was in the middle of the action of June and July of 1944.
Through it all, Marie-Louise perseveres. She is wounded, she sleeps (when the noise of war allows for sleep) in trenches or in a makeshift shelter under her stairway, and endures news of friends lost in the battles that rage around her. She visits nearby villages and towns and describes the devastation she sees. She bicycles to the coast and views the comings and goings between land and naval forces.
Some of the most interesting entries are when she describes the soldiers that have overtaken her home. She is a shrewd observer; her comments on the likeness and differences between the German and British troops are fascinating. How she manages to get along with each wave of troops, try to protect her property, and still maintain some dignity is a testament to the human ability to survive the unthinkable.
An excellent read! show less
This amazing diary begins with an entry dated August 6, 1940: "First occupation of the Château de Périers by the Germans; altogether, two non-commissioned officers and four enlisted men." The diary goes on with a few entries for 1940, 1942, and 1943 as the occupation by German troops escalated and the château and its grounds were taken over by provisions, tanks, foxholes, and trenches. Marie-Louise, a fifty-year old widow is allowed to live in one room of the château. This show more is not a large château, but rather what might be thought of as a manor house.
The diary really picks up in February 1944 and from that point on there are nearly daily entries covering events leading up to D-Day, the departure of the Germans, and the occupation of the property by British troops. The final entry is for August 17, 1944.
The village of Périers is located about three miles inland from the beaches of the D-Day invasion, about midway between Caen and the coast. It was in the middle of the action of June and July of 1944.
Through it all, Marie-Louise perseveres. She is wounded, she sleeps (when the noise of war allows for sleep) in trenches or in a makeshift shelter under her stairway, and endures news of friends lost in the battles that rage around her. She visits nearby villages and towns and describes the devastation she sees. She bicycles to the coast and views the comings and goings between land and naval forces.
Some of the most interesting entries are when she describes the soldiers that have overtaken her home. She is a shrewd observer; her comments on the likeness and differences between the German and British troops are fascinating. How she manages to get along with each wave of troops, try to protect her property, and still maintain some dignity is a testament to the human ability to survive the unthinkable.
An excellent read! show less
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- Popularity
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- Rating
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