or sending a cheque for $20.00Cdn. plus $3.00 postage
to:
Arlo M Moen
PO Box 34074
Scotia Square RPO
Halifax, NS
B3J 3S1
or buy it on my Website.
What's this book about?
AUTHOR’S NOTES: I want to make it perfectly clear; the stories in stage one of this book are unadorned fact, as true as my memory permits. These accounts constitute Naval History since they detail my servicein the destroyer, H.M.C.S. St. Laurent, when it was an escort for the first wartime convoy leaving Bedford Basin in September1939; my service in the destroyer, H.M.C.S. Saguenay, when she was torpedoed in December 1940; my service in H.M.S.Drake during the Plymouth Blitz and my service in the battleship H.M.S. Rodney during its bombardment of the German battleship, Bismark in May 1941.They are the reason I struggled to publish this book. Too many stories are being lost as Naval veterans die off: Let these not be among them. The stories in stage two are creative factual accounts of the postwarNavy. Stage three stories are vehicles to tell what it was like growing up in small town Saskatchewan in the 1930s. Stage four is the fictional product of my slightly deranged mind.
Others said : Moen, a veteran of WW2 and a long time serviceman decided in his eighties he should write a book and A Sailor’s Stories is the result. On December 1,1940, the HMCS Saguenay was torpedoed 300 miles west of Ireland by the Italian submarine Argo while escorting Convoy HG-47, and managed to return to Barrow-in-Furness largely under her own power, but with 19 dead and without most of her bow. Arlo Moen was there. He was also on board the H.M.S. Rodney, one of the ships that gave the famous last chase to the German battleship, the Bismarck. A Sailor’s Stories tells of the war and the times after the war when his ship visited Havana in the heady days of the fifties. Reading this book will make you think you are sitting with Arlo, knocking back a few rum and cokes while the stories flow. Moen shares, as well, his life as a young boy in Outback, Sask during the depression. His stories about pest houses, travelling exhibitions, and the politics of ladies’ society clubs will bring that time alive.
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