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The Cruellest Night

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She was a refugee ship, a troop transport and a hospital ship. She was carrying 8,000 men, women and children away from the rampaging Russian army in an evacuation that has become known as the 'German Dunkirk'. And she was heading for the grimmest and most horrifying disaster in naval history.

Everyone has heard of the Titanic and the Lusitania - when sea disasters are discussed those are the first names that come to mind. No one ever speaks of the Wilhelm Gustloff. She is the ship no one has heard of, as though she never existed at all. Yet the Wilhelm Gustloff took part in one of the most bizarre operations of the Second World War, and almost 7,000 people - nearly five times as many as went down on the Titanic - perished in her doomed final voyage.

223 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1980

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Christopher Dobson

35 books4 followers

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5 stars
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24 (40%)
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Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews
Profile Image for Becca Pirie.
262 reviews12 followers
April 17, 2017
At the beginning of November, I read a book called Death in the Baltic by Cathryn J Prince, a non-fiction book published in 2013 about the sinking of the Wilhelm Gustloff. I thought it was a good book, but I saw a one-star review that said there was incorrect information in it and mentioned two other books to read instead: A. V. Sellwood's The Damned Don't Drown, and The Cruelest Night. So I checked my library and, yay, they had a copy of this sitting on a shelf.

This was fantastic. A quick, gripping read. I didn't take too many notes while reading cause 1. I'm an idiot 2. I didn't wanna stop reading. It's horrifying in places, just to read about and imagine the absolute terror these thousands of people felt is pretty overwhelming. Some of the images in my head of a staircase blocked with trampled corpses and unbelievable amounts of frozen bodies in the sea won't be leaving me any time soon.

It blows my mind when I think about the fact that this sinking is not commonly known. As this book says itself (although I didn't write down the actual quote cause I suck) if you ask someone what they think is the worst shipwreck, you'll often hear Titanic or Lusitania, and a few months ago, I'd have said one of those two as well. It was only upon reading the synopsis for a historical fiction book called Salt to the Sea by Ruta Sepetys that I learned about this ship and it's story. A death toll of, what is now thought to be, around 9,400 and not a lot of people know. Just...wow.

I would recommend this book (even though it is now out of print...if you can get a copy, do it, it's a great book).
Profile Image for Roger Weston.
Author 41 books72 followers
January 24, 2013
The Cruelest Night tells of the worst maritime disaster in history, a shipwreck where five times more died than on the Titanic. The writing paints vivid pictures so that the reader gets a clear picture of a frightening and disastrous night on the Baltic. It lays out the tragic historical events that led to a Russian submarine sinking the Wilhelm Gustloff, a ship packed with thousands of women and children.
Profile Image for Bill Purkayastha.
61 reviews12 followers
November 18, 2020
No book that claims the Titanic was a Cunard liner, when ten seconds of research would tell the author it was White Star, can be taken seriously. No book which claims the German U Boatwaffe lost "well over ninety percent" of its crew, without providing figures (the exact figures are easily available from German records and were high but much less than 90%) can be taken seriously. Nor, like the vast majority of pop "history" books written during the era, can its antiSoviet tone be concealed, to the extent that the book approaches being pro Nazi. Overall, Cold War pulp fiction masquerading as history.
Profile Image for Alan Carlson.
289 reviews4 followers
August 5, 2024
Another well-written book by Christopher Dobson. The Cruelest Night was the first account in English of the sinking of the cruise liner Wilhelm Gustoff while carrying thousands of refugees, wounded soldiers, and others from East Prussia to Germany proper, on 30 January 1945. A moving account of the loss and suffering of those doomed by AH's miscarried war on the USSR. The book also covers the loss of two other larger German liners in early 1945, again from torpedoes from Soveit submarines.
Profile Image for Gabby.
264 reviews9 followers
March 14, 2021
I looked up this book after reading The Salt to the Sea. It brought the event to life in a way that honored those who died with its honest and harrowing descriptions. If you want to learn about the sinking of the Wilhelm Gustloff. It's a shock to me that it's not more well known as "the greatest maritime tragedy of WWII".
Profile Image for Michele.
1,082 reviews
February 19, 2018
The historical account of the events in the fiction book Salt to the Sea. An interesting and informative read.
Profile Image for Tracy McClowry.
22 reviews2 followers
January 11, 2021
I read this after reading "Salt to the Sea" by Ruta Sepetys, for more historical information about the sinking of the Wilhelm Gustloff. Very well researched and interesting book.
Profile Image for Heather.
454 reviews16 followers
March 8, 2017
very good historical read about the greatest maritime tragedy in history - the sinking of the Wilhelm Gusthoff during WWII. Sadly, the history books don't tell of this event. Worth the read if you like history in general or WWII history.
Profile Image for Alice Kuhn.
237 reviews3 followers
March 16, 2016
The untold story of one of the greatest maritime tragedies of World War II. At least seven thousand military personnel and civilians died when the Wilhem Gustoff, an ocean liner, was sunk by a Russian submarine in the Baltic Sea in 1945.
Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews

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