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Six Weeks of Blenheim Summer

One Pilot’s Extraordinary Account of the Battle of France

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About this listen

Penguin presents the audiobook edition of Six Weeks of Blenheim Summer by Alastair Panton, read by Jonathan Keeble.

As I write, I can clearly recall the stinging heat of aburning Blenheim, smells, tastes, expressions, sounds of voices and, most ofall, fear gripping deep in me.


Flying Officer Alastair Panton was just twenty-three when his squadron deployed across the Channel in the defence of France. They were desparate days.

Pushed back to the beaches as the German blitzkrieg rolled through the Low Countries and into France, by June 4th 1940 the evacuation ofthe Allies from Dunkirk was complete. A little over two weeks later France surrendered.

Flying vital, dangerous, low-level missions throughout the campaign in support of the troops on the ground, Panton's beloved but unarmed Bristol Blenheim was easy meat for the marauding Messerschmitts. At the height of fighting he was losing two of his small squadron's crews to the enemy every day.

Discovered in a box by his grandchildren after his death in 2002, Alastair Panton's Six Weeks of Blenheim Summer is a lost classic. One of the most moving, vivid and powerful accounts of war in the air ever written. And an unforgettable testament to the courage, stoicism, camaraderie and humanity of Britain's greatest generation.

'THE BEST ACCOUNT OF THE CHAOS AND CONFUSION OF WAR OUTSIDE THE PAGES OF EVELYN WAUGH' THE TIMES

'ONE CAN'T HELP FEELING AWE AND REVERENCE. THERE ARE ENOUGHEDVENTURES HERE FOR A LIFETIME'
LOUIS DE BERNIERES

'SIMPLY WONDERFUL. ONE OF THE BEST ACCOUNTS OF WWii I HAVE EVER READ'
JOHN NICHOL

Europe Great Britain Military Military & War World War II War Thought-Provoking

Critic reviews

Six Weeks of Blenheim Summer tells an amazing story of bravery and courage in the air and on the ground. (General the Lord Dannatt GCB CBE MC DL)
This story grips you by the lapels and sometimes by the throat, and all who love tales of war will devour every page. (Matthew Parris)
It is the best account of the chaos and confusion of war - and a British defeat - outside the pages of Evelyn Waugh. It deserves to be a best seller.
One can't help feeling awe and reverence for people like this. There are enough adventures here for a lifetime, let alone six weeks. (Louis de Bernieres)
All stars
Most relevant
An amazing first hand account of the fall of France, which must have been hard for the author to revisit.

Wonderfully written, superbly narrated.

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A deeply moving, exciting and occasionally funny memoir, beautifully written and outstandingly well read. Perfect.

Brilliant

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Well delivered and thoroughly engaging. The fact that Blenheim pilots were victims of their obsolete aircraft you can only applaud their sacrifice, courage and mettle against all odds. This biography of sorts of Alastair Panton father is superbly documented with facts, antidotes and whimsical tomes, but above all it portrays the six weeks of May-June 1940 when the Germans advanced through France despite the efforts of gallant French and British Airmen to stem the tide. The book focuses of the Reconnaissance Blenheim force, which though heavily outperformed by the Luftwaffe fighters, struggled to but successfully achieved the vital situational information required daily by the ground forces. The tells of the aircrew and groundcrew interactions; and the interactions of the local French people who above all did help when needed. I recommend this book; it is six hours of enlightenment added with entertainment.

Blenheim Reflection in Darkest Times of 1940

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A "must hear" story about a part of the RAF's role in the early part of WW2 that isn't available elsewhere. Just a shame that the narrator is an idiot. Odd-E-ham is NOT a place in Hampshire or anywhere else -- the narrator is a pain! So irritating. But, the idiot narrator why didn't bother to check so important a place name aside, this is one fantastic and engaging story. Thank you for publishing. I highly recommend.

A "must hear" story about the RAF in early WW2

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My own father operated as Gunner in Blenheims mainly 114 Squadron. This story powerfully depicts the horror and banality of war,at this time,making it feel so real. A great tribute to these brave and forgotten air crew.

Blenheim Boy’s story

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