Middle East Affairs: War Adventures of Zahos Hadjifotiou in Tobruk El Alamein and Rimini


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About The Book

A World War II veteran recounts firsthand horrors on bloody battlefields and passionate liaisons in Middle Eastern nightclubs as a Grecian soldier.Hadjifotious (Games of Passion in Mykonos 2015) life was interrupted by war with Mussolinis invasion of Greece spurring him to leave home and join the fight against the Axis powers. He enlisted in the British army and found himself in the port city of Tobruk Libya. Here he was one of historys famous Desert Rats--men who spent eight months of hell under siege by Field Marshal Erwin Rommels troops: Thirty-five thousand wounded and several thousand dead. Hadjifotious reputation as one of Tobruks heroes afforded him numerous promotions and military decorations. He was eventually assigned to pilot a crane named Mac to salvage Allied vehicles and save trapped soldiers. Between the siege and battles against German forces in both El Alamein Egypt and Rimini Italy he spent many of his nights with fellow soldiers acting out in the urbane nightclubs of Egypt and later Beirut seeking pleasure and luxury with alcohol and women. The author recalls his wartime adventures with a dry romanticism never shying away from his experiences be they vodka-fueled nights or hand-to-hand combat on the battlefield. Hadjifotiou is short-tempered and apolitical prone to nostalgia in unexpected ways--the soldier recalls his crane with more sentimentality than his whirlwind marriage to a French generals daughter. When reunited with his lost love Yuki Russell a Jewish-American singer he met early in the war his enthusiasm will likely seem shocking to some as he seemed to have all but forgotten her before. Theres no sugarcoating these oddities no rationalizations made for these arrogant or reckless turns any more than for the heroic ones. The closest the book comes to indemnifying the actions of any--from womanizing to looting--is to maintain that those who were not there cannot know. The autobiography is remarkably concise perhaps to its detriment--its unlikely readers will feel transported to nightclubs or war zones with its minimalist approach.A pithy and unapologetic memoir as much about the good times of war as the bad.-- Kirkus ReviewsAugust 19 2016
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