Black Camp 21 is a World War Two story inspired by some of Britain’s prisoner of war camps that were built to accommodate the thousands of German soldiers who were captured in the months after the D-Day landings.
This is the story of tank driver and SS Officer Max. After his capture he is shipped to England and taken to London where he and several other SS officers are interrogated. They are then sent to a large camp in Devizes, but are kept separate from other German groups. Feared even among their fellow soldiers, the SS are given black circles to denote them.
Max discovers that the security and fencing are lax in Devizes and he is part of a mass break-out plan. However, the British aren’t as blind to the planning of the operation as the Germans think.
Later Max is taken to Scotland along with some of the more dangerous prisoners. This camp is notorious for the internal discipline that the Germans meter out themselves on their fellow camp mates.
This was an unusual war story and the author’s notes describe the documented death of an inmate at Black Camp 21 that inspired the whole idea. The author had also visited the camp which, I believe, still has some remnants left today. It’s quite a dark tale with a few twists, but it sets a good pace and has enough tension and intrigue to keep the pages turning.