Home » Bookshop » SAS The Great Train Raid : The Most Daring SAS Mission of WWII

SAS The Great Train Raid : The Most Daring SAS Mission of WWII

by

£25.00

Hardback 400 pages, N/A
Quercus Publishing 23 October 2025
Lewis, Damien

1 in stock

Product total
Options total
Grand total
ISBN/SKU: 9781529441161 Categories/Genres: ,

Description

A WARTIME MISSION UNLIKE ANY OTHERAutumn 1943: the SAS hijack a train, raid deep into enemy territory, and liberate a concentration camp. A mission so extraordinary, yet so secret, that barely any record exists.

Via first-hand testimonies and long-hidden files, Damien Lewis has unearthed the incredible details, bringing to life an astonishing tale of bravery, daring and determination which showcases the SAS at their very finest.

****PRAISE FOR SAS THE GREAT TRAIN RAID’A staggering feat of bravery kept secret for decades, but now the SAS train raid on a concentration camp during the Second World War is detailed in an incredible new book’ SUNDAY EXPRESS’Long-hidden files and unseen personal accounts reveal a daring rescue mission from an Italian concentration camp’ DAILY TELEGRAPH’There is an enduring appeal about the SAS in Britain, the United States and beyond, in an age when we need heroes who were fighting the good fight more than ever’ SUNDAY TIMES’In autumn 1943 the SAS pulled off one of the most audacious missions of the Second World War. And yet the Great Train Raid to liberate Pisticci concentration camp has been relatively unknown until now’ TIMES RADIO

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “SAS The Great Train Raid : The Most Daring SAS Mission of WWII”

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


Stay Up to Date

Receive email notifications for news, offers and events at Dogberry & Finch Books

How Subscriptions Work | Privacy Policy

This website was created using funding from Devon County Council: Devon County Council – Devon Elevation Fund Community Renewal Fund.
‘Rising to the challenge of a new climate of high street bookselling’