Lucky Johnny: The Footballer Who Survived the River Kwai Death Camps

Lucky Johnny: The Footballer Who Survived the River Kwai Death Camps

by JohnnySherwood (Author), Hodder&Stoughton (Author)

Synopsis

In 1938, Johnny Sherwood was a young professional soccer player touring the world with the all-star British team the Islington Corinthians. By 1942, he was a soldier surrendering to the Japanese at the siege of Singapore. He was sent to a POW camp deep in the heart of the Thai jungle, where he was starved, beaten, and forced to build the notorious railway of death on the River Kwai. Johnny kept his and his men's spirits up with tales of his soccer past, even organizing matches until he and the other prisoners became too weak to play. One day, he encountered a brutal Japanese guard and was shocked to recognize him as a Japanese soccer player he once played against. Many years after Johnny's death, his grandson, Michael, discovered an old manuscript hidden in the attic of his mother's house. It was Johnny's own account of his wartime experiences the story too horrific to reveal in full to his loved ones. In the tradition of bestselling memoirs like The Railway Man, Lucky Johnny is an inspirational tale of survival against the odds.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 320
Publisher: Hodder & Stoughton
Published: 01 Jun 2014

ISBN 10: 1473603358
ISBN 13: 9781473603356

Author Bio
Johnny Sherwood played professional soccer for Islington Corinthians, Middlesbrough, Reading, Aldershot, and Crystal Palace. During the war, he was a Sergeant in Great Britain's Royal Artillery. Sherwood suffered lifelong effects from his POW years, but went on to become a pub landlord and successful bookie. Michael Doe is Sherwood's grandson. He discovered his grandfather's manuscript hidden in the attic of his mother's house in 2013.