Press Release
'I Kept My Word': Author Reveals Secret Behind Glenn
Miller's Death
BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Nov. 13, 2006 -- In "I Kept My Word" (now
available through AuthorHouse), author Clarence B. Wolfe (as
told to Susan Goodrich Giffin) shares details of his
involvement in the death of famous 1940s bandleader Glenn
Miller, as well as what he claims is the military's cover-up
of Miller's mysterious demise. It all adds up to a secret
Wolfe kept for more than 60 years.
In 1944, as a gunner with Battery D, 134th AAA Battalion,
Wolfe took his position in Folkestone, England, manning the
computer that relayed enemy fighter planes from radar to the
guns that shot them down. In the course of receiving target
alerts from the British Wrens, young women who were experts
at the radar that tracked enemy aircraft, Wolfe became an
unwitting participant in the downing of a small plane that
carried renowned bandleader Miller to a horrible, untimely
death. Upon realization of their actions, which were
strictly within the line of duty, Wolfe claims he was sworn
to secrecy by his commanding officer, Capt. Foley. In "I
Kept My Word," Wolfe details the cover-up of Miller's death
by the 8th Army Air Force that has been furthered by the
military and media since 1944.
Ever since the accident, Wolfe believed the captain wanted
him dead and he had sufficient evidence to support this
claim. Foley repeatedly sent Wolfe on high-risk missions:
collecting live ammunition on the shores of Normandy,
France; and sending him behind enemy lines to spy. Wolfe not
only survived these dangerous assignments, as well as a
treacherous rescue, but his many brushes with death during
the war made him conclude that he survived for a purpose -
to tell the true story about what really happened to Glenn
Miller. That he kept this secret for 62 years bears great
testimony to his personal integrity.
"I Kept My Word" is a definite page-turner as readers share
with Wolfe the many experiences of war. However,
underscoring all of his exploits was the nagging memory that
he had participated in the death of a man whose magical
music captured the hearts of soldiers worldwide and softened
the blows of war.
As Wolfe approaches the end of his life, now at the age of
82, he feels a responsibility to history to finally break
his promise. All the tall-tales and conspiracy theories can
now be put to rest, he says, as this 62-year-old secret
reveals the truth long shrouded in mystery.
Wolfe grew up the youngest of 11 children, living dirt-poor
on a farm in southern Indiana. Whoever said "You can take
the man out of the small town, but you can't take the small
town out of the man" must have known Wolfe. Whether he was
living in the United States, England or Belgium, he was
still an Indiana farm boy. After the war, Wolfe served with
a number of different units stationed in Germany until 1951,
when he married and returned to the U.S. Wolfe is a resident
of Bloomington, Ind., and "I Kept My Word" is the author's
first book.
AuthorHouse is the premier publishing house for emerging
authors and new voices in literature. For more information,
please visit http://www.authorhouse.com.
EDITORS: For review copies or interview requests, contact:
Jill Rensink, Publicity Coordinator
Tel: 800-839-8640, ext. 5312
Fax: 812-961-3133
Email: jrensink@authorhouse.com
(When requesting a review copy, please provide a street address.)
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