


We will bring you episodes throughout the year, so stay subscribed on your podcast app! Podcast cover art by Molly Austin All instrumental music is from and composed by Kevin MacLeod () License: CC BY () Sound effects used under RemArc Licence. And share our podcast on social media and recommend it to friends – that's how we'll keep going. Please rate and review us wherever you get podcasts. The Slightest Chance follows the remarkable true story of the only escape from Japanese imprisonment by a Western woman during World War II. Dad’s first wartime novel, A Chance Kill, is a love-story/thriller based on real events in Poland, Paris, London and Prague. Available as e-books, as well as in paperback.

Listen out for our best ‘prison’ jokes! And don’t forget after the end theme song, we’ve got more of the good stuff, including questions and out-takes – and more jokes! Read industry reviews of Dad’ s World War II novels, A Chance Kill and The Slightest Chance, at. Internment was when ordinary men, women and children were imprisoned because they – or their parents – were born in an enemy country, and the country they lived in thought they might secretly help the other side. Why were ordinary families kept prisoner in World War II? Listenĭad and Me investigate ‘internment’ in America, the UK, Australia, Hong Kong and beyond. We will bring you episodes throughout the year, so stay subscribed on your podcast app! Podcast cover art by Molly Austin All instrumental music is from and composed by Kevin MacLeod () License: CC BY (). At the end of today’s episode there are ba gs of extras (after our outro theme song) – including an insight into the Hekkenberg family’s own World War II family history! Read industry reviews of Dad’s World War II novels, A Chance Kill and The Slightest Chance, at. There are no graphic descriptions – just listen out for incredible stories from veterans from BOTH SIDES of World War II. You’ll hear clips from just a few of the incredible interviews Jaxon has carried out. Jaxon is doing remarkable things, teaching us all how we can save history.

Listen and learn from a 16-year-old master historian – and hear some incredible interviews! Today we are joined by a very special high school kid: historian Jaxon Hekkenberg.
