Ill Met by Moonlight

by W. Stanley Moss

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An account by one of the officers who took part in one of the great escapades of World War II. In 1943, W. Stanley Moss and Patrick Leigh-Fermor, both serving with Special Forces in the Middle East, decided on a plan to kidnap General Kreipe, Commander of the Sevastapol Division in Crete, and bring him back to Allied-occupied Cairo. This is the story of their adventures, working with a fearsome band of partisans, as they daringly capture the General in an ambush and struggle to evade show more pursuing German troops in the mountainous Cretan landscape to reach their rendezvous for evacuation to safety. show less

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12 reviews
An end of holiday read and a ripping yarn. Having spent a sleepless night half way up mount Toubkal this week I can almost smell the cold and damp discomfort of their nights and days hiding with no warmth and little shelter. The joy of good food and wine after a few days without is palpable. The fellowship between the Allies, and their admiration of and gratitude to the resistance fighters makes it a warm-hearted read. I have never considered the extent of the commando missions happening all over Europe during the war so it feels like a window into one small escapade out of many!
Stirring and jaunty memoir of a famous wartime adventure carried out by British agents in German-occupied Crete. Most memorable is the insouciance and cameraderie of the youthful agents, and the colourful characters and resourcefulness of the Cretans that assist and support them as they move on foot or mule between caves and goatfold hideouts up in the stony mountains. That all their exploits and interactions in the resistance to the harsh occupying forces were purposeful and bore huge risks is downplayed, matching the tenor of this operation itself, the kidnapping of the German commander, designed not to harm but to embarrass the enemy. Moss’s spirited description, taken directly from the day-by-day notes he scribbled down during the show more operation itself was in progress, is augmented by prologues and notes, giving context, and in Leigh Fermor’s case, the panache of his usual rich and referential prose. show less
An audacious but risky adventure, recalled with panache by the author. Notable for the accounts of the uneasy relationships between the Cretans and the occupying forces and between the British-led partisans and the Communists, something that the rather irritating Powell & Pressburger film managed to miss completely. All the same, you can't help feeling that if General Kreipe's abduction had taken place a year or two earlier, the German response would've been much harsher.
Classic true story, modestly told, of the abduction of General Kreipe on Crete during the second world war. I came to this because of Patrick Leigh Fermor's part in the tale, but thoroughly enjoyed the telling by Billy (W. Stanley Moss). Well worth the read.
That this audacious plan actually succeeded beggars belief. Driving the kidnapped general through 21 checkpoints and then extricating him to Egypt takes a lot of gall. Great descriptions of all the people in the operation.
During WWII British Special Operations Executive (SOE) officers W. Stanley Moss and Patrick Leigh Fermor (later a well-known travel writer) kidnapped German General Heinrich Kreipe on Crete with the help of Cretan Partisans. Moss tells the story from beginning to end with the help of his diary entries made at the time.

Against the odds, General Kreipe was an amiable traveling companion during the three weeks it took the group to evade German search teams and get off the island. He was mostly concerned about his loss of a medal during the kidnap and then his loss of pay and promotion.

Moss gives a detailed account of the trek across Crete to the team’s eventual exfiltration point and of all the help they received along the way from the show more Cretans. It’s a good, solid war story. show less
An honest and factually informative account of a kidnap of a senior Nazi General by 2 British Officers written with a gusto for the hazardous episode & a uniquely under-played style by one of those Officers that reflects the enormity of the courage & the risks taken during the height of World War Two.

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Picture of author.
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Some Editions

Foot, M.R.D. (Introduction)
Moncreiffe, Iain (Prologue and Epilogue)

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Ill Met by Moonlight
Original title
Ill Met by Moonlight
Original publication date
1950
People/Characters
Patrick Leigh Fermor; W. Stanley Moss; Special Operations Executive; Heinrich Kreipe
Important places
Crete, Greece
Important events
World War II; Kidnapping of Heinrich Kreipe
Related movies
Ill Met by Moonlight (1957 | IMDb)
Dedication
This book is for Sophie
First words
The water had become miraculously calm.
Original language
English

Classifications

Genres
History, Nonfiction, Biography & Memoir, General Nonfiction
DDC/MDS
940.548141History & geographyHistory of EuropeHistory of Europe1918-Military history of World War IIOther TopicsMemories and autobiographiesBritish military memoirs of WWII
LCC
D766.7 .C7 .M6History of Europe, Asia, Africa and OceaniaHistory (General)World War II (1939-1945)
BISAC

Statistics

Members
543
Popularity
54,511
Reviews
12
Rating
(4.04)
Languages
English, Finnish, Italian, Spanish
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
19
ASINs
23