No Retreating Footsteps
The story of one of the most famous battalions that took part in the Normandy
invasion and fought from there to war's end in a long series of exciting
battles. It begins with the origin of the regiment and training days, then
pictures with dramatic detail the armada of landing craft reaching the beaches
of France on D-Day, June 6, 1944, as a thousand guns thundered out a devastating
barrage from the sea.
Then graphic recital tells of the North Novas riding on tanks through Bernieres
to a thrilling thrust inland that carried them far ahead of the rest of the
Division until they had closed with German forces triple their number in
some of the hardest fighting of the first days of
the invasion. Two companies
were cut off and fought to the bitter end with the enemy all around them.
There is a vivid account of the attack on Caen, July 8th, and the truth about
the holocaust at Tilly la Campagne on July 25th when the North Novas attacked
under artificial moonlight and suffered tragic losses.
There was the nightmare of the Falaise Gap, the long chase, Boulogne, Cap Gris Nez, the deadly polder fighting of the Scheldt, winter raids, water posts, the savage horror of Bienen, forest fighting, Holland, Germany, a hundred and one incidents of attacks and surprises.
The book is filled with touches of human interest that make it different from the average unit history. Here is no routine recounting of battle action as taken from the records but a thrilling story told with authenticity and with the sympathetic understanding of a veteran of trench and open warfare.
(As appears on the inside flap of No Retreating Footsteps' dust jacket.)
The Two Jacks
"So they went back to civilian life and joined hundreds of others in college
classes, sank their identity and relegated memories of prison camps and prison
trains, Marquis expeditions and North Novas battles, Captain Le Coz and the
volatile Mimi, to the realm of things forgotten."
Thus ends the thrilling account of the almost incredible adventures of the
two Canadians -- Jack Fairweather and Jack Veness -- who enlisted about the
same time, met in England, and were both sent as lieutenants to the North
Nova Scotia Highlanders. From then on they were almost "twins," though serving
in different companies. Both were in action on D-Day, and after some thrilling
fighting were taken prisoner. The story of their experiences as prisoners,
their escape to the French Underground, and their fast-moving and breath-taking
"expeditions" with the cruel Captain Le Coz, makes fascinating reading.

Each of the men had been Mentioned in Despatches. Veness had been named a Chevalier of the Order of Leopold II with palm and decorated with the Croix de Guerre 1940 with palms. He had been promoted from lieutenant to captain, and from captain to major within four months. And as he let his thinking go back over the months he marvelled that he was still alive. Fairweather rose from a private soldier in the ranks to Field Officer (Major) in less than three years, and was the youngest major in the entire Canadian army and probably in all the British forces. He too had had death whispering by his side for many months, but time and again emerged scatheless. And now, after several years, the Two Jacks recall their experiences, and they are set down in these fast-moving pages by Will R. Bird, a veteran of the First World War and a storyteller equal to the task.
(As appears on the inside flaps of The Two Jacks' dust jacket.)
Will R. Bird, born in Cumberland County, Nova Scotia, is descended from a
long line of Yorkshiremen who first settled in the historic county around
Amherst in 1722.