Camas author Susan Tate Ankeny had heard her father’s breathtaking World War II story — Dean Tate, a B-17 bombardier, shot down over Nazi-occupied France, rescued by a French Resistance network — countless times before.
“I had heard the story about Dad being shot down over France so often I knew it by heart. Or at least I thought I did,” Tate Ankeny, 58, writes in her newly published book, The Girl and the Bombardier: A True Story of Resistance and Rescue in Nazi-Occupied France. “While most men never talked about their war experiences, my dad told his story of being rescued by the French Resistance to anyone who would listen.”
Dean Tate had written a partial memoir of his WWII experience, but Tate Ankeny said her father, a lifelong educator and former school district superintendent, lived more in the present than the past. Instead of finishing the memoir himself, he turned his writing and notes over to his daughter.
“I felt like this was a story that was really important,” Tate Ankeny says. “But it was a story that had fallen into my lap.”
After her father’s death in 2003, Tate Ankeny would learn there were stories about her father that she had never heard — stories best told by the people who lived them.