Modern Era Naval Non-Fiction Section

Battles

Biographical

Famous Ships

Ships & Design

General

The Golden Horseshoe

The legendary U-boat ace Otto Kretschmer was branded 'the wolf of the Atlantic', and for good reason. In his dramatic wartime career he sank ship after ship, sowing terror among Allied convoys and dismay in those charged with their protection.

Kretschmer was a daring officer who favoured bringing his U-boat into the heart of the convoy and destroying it from within. He earned himself a tremendous reputation before his capture in March 1941, and The Golden Horseshoe makes it clear why.

Terence Robertson’s biography of the U-boat ace draws upon first-hand experience of conditions and the deadly game as the hunter sought to outfox the hunted. He paints a masterly portrait of life at sea and weaves in the fascinating story of Kretschmer and the exploits of his U-Boats. Kretschmer was eventually captured and interviewed by Captain McIntyre of HMS Walker, an episode which is also recounted in this book.

Otto Kretschmer became a prisoner of war in March 1941 and spent most of the rest of the war in Bowmanville camp, Canada, before his release in 1947.

  • Author: Terence Robertson
  • Title: The Golden Horseshoe: The Wartime Career of Otto Kretschmer, U-Boat Ace
  • First Published by: Evans Brothers
  • First Published Format: HC
  • First Published Date: 1956

© 2008-2024 David Hayes (Astrodene)