This is a pretty obscure Foreign Legion book published by Curtis (Warren) Books (The Best in Low Priced Reading) in 1954. Curtis Warren, Ltd. was based in London, UK, and operated primarily from the late 1940s to the mid-1950s, with some publications possibly extending into the early 1960s. It was part of the UK’s post-war paperback boom, a period when cheap paperbacks were in high demand due to their affordability and accessibility. (According to Grok AI). Unfortunately I have no idea who the author, M. Dubois, was and can only assume it was a pseudonym, which most Curtis authors were. So again, thank you Eugene O. for providing this rare paperback. This is not a pulp magazine short story but is full of the same type of action and adventure–good escape fiction like the pulps provided back in the day.
Legion Etrangere is set in post-World War II Morocco and is a fantastic example of stories set in the Foreign Legion that involve hidden pasts, revenge, dogged pursuit, and a final culminating battle and face-to-face confrontation with the villain. The story follows Lieutenant Hearn, an Englishman and former member of the Long Range Desert Group, who is driven by a decade-long quest for vengeance against Helmuth Weber, a former S.S. officer responsible for the massacre of Hearn’s wounded comrades in the N. African desert during WW2. Hearn tracks Weber, along with his associates, to Morocco, where they are suspected of joining French Foreign Legion to escape their past war crimes. There are some flashbacks to the incident that spurs Hearn in his quest for revenge and eventually he catches up with Weber during a Legion combat operation Arab forces. There is also a bit of side plot involving some criminal elements in the Legion (who also get their payback). The link below is for a .pdf. This link is for a .cbr version.













