Operation Bowler: The Audacious Allied Bombing of Venice
By (Author) Jonathan Glancey
By (author) Jonathan Glancey
Oneworld Publications
Oneworld Publications
3rd June 2025
6th March 2025
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Specific battles
History of art
History of architecture
Hardback
336
Width 153mm, Height 234mm, Spine 29mm
21st March 1945. 1530 hours. Bursting through a hazy sky, dozens of Allied fighters and bombers sweep over German-occupied Venice. Their mission destroy Germanys strategic outposts nestled along the port, while leaving the floating city unscathed. As bombs rained down upon Europe, flattening city after city, Venice La Serenissima; home of Titian and Veronese; immortalised in the serene landscapes of Canaletto remained sacrosanct. Its artistic and architectural treasure too considerable, too precious to risk destruction. But, as the push up through Italy reached its final, gruelling months, the Allies were confronted with a terrible dilemma. The ancient city of Venice was now closer and closer to the line of fire. As casualties mounted, the value of art, of history seemed diminished just a month earlier Allied bombers had reduced the ancient hilltop abbey of Monte Cassino to a stony husk. In a gripping tale, bestselling author Jonathan Glancey reveals the thrilling history of Operation Bowler. Joining audacious Wing Commander George Westlake DFC and his elite team, Operation Bowler explores how an unlikely squad of pilots executed one of the most meticulous and complex air raids of the Second World War, sparing not only Venice, but its people.
Jonathan Glancey is a journalist, author and broadcaster. He was Architecture and Design correspondent of the Guardian from 1997 to 2012 and Architecture and Design Editor of the Independent from 1989 to 1997. He now writes for the Daily Telegraph among other publications. He is the author of Spitfire: The Biography, Concordeand The Story of Architecture, among others.