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George Weller interviews Emperor Haile Selassie at his palace in Ethiopia. (Anthony Weller/ Polaris Images) |
War as it really was
George Weller, a Boston native and novelist, eventually became a fearless and prolific World War II correspondent. He filed eyewitness accounts from battlegrounds and beachheads and chronicled feats of heroism and humanity, winning a Pulitzer Prize for his account of submarine crewmen performing an appendectomy.
Weller was captured by the Germans when they invaded Crete in 1941, but he managed to escape. That same year he was one of the last reporters to get out of Singapore before the Japanese invasion. Four weeks after the atomic bombing of Nagasaki, Weller was the first outside journalist to enter the city. His reports were censored and weren't published in their original form until 2006 when his son, Anthony Weller, collected them in "First into Nagasaki."
Now Anthony Weller, who lives in Annisquam, has edited another collection, "Weller's War: A Legendary Foreign Correspondent's Saga of World War II on Five Continents" (Crown). George Weller's prose is compelling, whether he was reporting near the front lines or telling a gem of a story, as when he interviewed a lieutenant whose plane was shot down, dumping him in shark-infested waters. To make matters worse, the aviator's life jacket had a hole in it. "That's what thumbs are for," the lieutenant told Weller.
US Supreme Court justices John Paul Stevens and Antonin Scalia have declared their support for de Vere. Noting that Shakespeare left no correspondence with his contemporaries and no books at his birthplace in Stratford-upon-Avon, Stevens told the Wall Street Journal last month, "I think the evidence that he was not the author is beyond a reasonable doubt."
On Saturday, the Shakespeare Fellowship will host a free daylong symposium in Watertown. Four Oxfordian scholars will make their case while exploring related topics, including the recently discovered oil painting that might be Shakespeare. Details at www.shakespearesymposium.org. RSVP by Wednesday.
Jan Gardner can be reached at JanLGardner@yahoo.com. ![]()




