The Gorodomlya Island Project (Hardback)
The Inside Story of How the Soviets developed Rocket Technology
Imprint: Pen & Sword Military
Pages: 264
Illustrations: 20 mono illustrations
ISBN: 9781036108823
Published: 28th February 2025
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When 20-year old RAF recruit Neville Cox, or ‘Cocky’, joins up in 1946, he is dismayed that the end of the war means he will never get to fly. Instead, he will be doing more of the technical drawing he is trained for. On a mission to a former Nazi-supported laboratory in Austria, he meets pilot and scientific intelligence expert Eric Ackermann, forming a friendship that lasts for years.
They encounter Russians who are, like them, combing out ‘scientific institutes’ in a search for remnants and instruments connected with the V-2; the ‘wonder weapon’ that devastated London in the Blitz.
Shockingly, Cocky is abducted from an airfield on his return from a trip to the UK and taken to Gorodomlya Island, where German rocket scientists have been supporting Soviet efforts to recreate and develop the V-2 rocket. Utilising the expertise of their captives on the island and in several other ‘design bureaus’ around Moscow, the Soviets' aim is a powerful rocket with a nuclear warhead, four times more deadly than the atomic bomb the Americans dropped on Hiroshima.
When a colleague is ‘disappeared’ to a remote closed city for using a self-made radio to pass on technical secrets, Cocky is convinced he will be next. An opportunity to escape arises through a visiting string quartet, although his eventual escape is not the planned diplomatic intervention, but a risky and hair-raising effort to outwit the KGB.
Following a career in signals intelligence, Cocky struggles to adjust to civilian life, and to having a civilian wife. Three children and ten years later, he escapes again with a new partner, this time to Nova Scotia in Canada, where he lived until his death, aged 99.
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About Amanda Vickers
Amanda Vickers works as a business consultant to charities; a role she has held for thirty years. Although she has had several short stories published, most recently in an anthology of lockdown stories, The Decameron Project, this is her first full-length book. She lives in West Yorkshire with her husband, while her two adult children live in Lyon, France, and London.