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Duncan Harding Naval Novelist DUNCAN HARDING As a 17 year old Duncan Harding volunteered for active service immediately war was declared. He left Dartmouth Naval College to become a gunner officer cadet on the venerable HMS Warspite. In 1940 he saw action off Norway and was mentioned in dispatches for his bravery there trying to stop the German invasion of that country. But young Duncan Harding didn’t like the routine of the old ‘battle wagon’. He volunteered again for small craft. Over the next few months he led an adventurous life on coastal landings and the like. In mid 1940 he won the Dutch Order of Orange Nassau for his part in rescuing the Dutch royal family from the German invaders. A year later as a full lieutenant he was wounded and won the DSC for his bravery in the raid on St Nazuire. But the young officer who was still not eligible to vote was not out of action very long. In the Mediterranean his destroyer was sunk by the French working with the German master and sent to a North African POW camp. Not for long. There he escaped and trekked eight days through the Western Desert until he reached the lines of the British 8th Army.
But Duncan Harding’s adventurous like at seas was not yet over. Although most of what he did in the 1950’s is still secret, it is known that at the height of the Cold War, he helped to run Anglo-American agents in Albania and Latvia. But by now his war wounds were beginning to play and he decided to retire on a half pension and become a writer. With the same energy and determination which had made him one of the Royal Navy’s outstanding skippers, it didn’t take Duncan Harding long to become the country’s outstanding writer of Naval fiction.
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