Dallas Public Library

Secret soldiers, how the U.S. Twenty-Third Special Troops fooled the Nazis, Paul B. Janeczko

Label
Secret soldiers, how the U.S. Twenty-Third Special Troops fooled the Nazis, Paul B. Janeczko
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 253-283) and index
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
index present
resource.interestAgeLevel
10-14, Brodart
resource.interestGradeLevel
5-9, Brodart
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Secret soldiers
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
1047618243
Responsibility statement
Paul B. Janeczko
resource.studyProgramName
Accelerated Reader, MG+, 9.1, 11, 501511.
Sub title
how the U.S. Twenty-Third Special Troops fooled the Nazis
Summary
What do set design, sound effects, and showmanship have to do with winning World War II? Meet the Ghost Army that played a surprising role in helping to deceive - and defeat - the Nazis. In his third book about deception during war, Paul B. Janeczko focuses his lens on World War II and the operations carried out by the Twenty-Third Headquarters Special Troops, aka the Ghost Army. This remarkable unit included actors, camouflage experts, sound engineers, painters, and set designers who used their skills to secretly and systematically replace fighting units - fooling the Nazi army into believing what their eyes and ears told them, even though the sights and sounds of tanks and war machines and troops were entirely fabricated. Follow the Twenty-Third into Europe as they play a dangerous game of enticing the German army into making battlefield mistakes by using sonic deceptions, inflatable tanks, pyrotechnics, and camouflage in more than twenty operations. From the Normandy invasion to the crossing of the Rhine River, the men of the Ghost Army - several of whom went on to become famous artists and designers after the war - played an improbable role in the Allied victory
Target audience
pre adolescent
Classification
Content
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