Career
He was the subject of a best-selling autobiography which has been criticised for sensationalism. He was also the subject of controversy for having claimed that he was the prisoner of war shown in a photograph staring at Heinrich Himmler, when the prisoner in question is identified elsewhere as a Soviet soldier. In Spring of 2008, ghostwriter Ken Scott was introduced to Horace Greasley, aged 89, so he could finally have his World World War II memoirs recorded.
Scott stated that he only acted as Horace"s fingers to type the book as Horace suffered from extreme arthritis.
The book was finished and published by the end of 2008 by Libros International, and gives Greasley"s account of his decision to go to war, his capture, struggles, near-death experiences, brutality of the Steamship, the unique love of Rosa Rauchbach, the escapes, and his liberation. Guy Walters has criticised the book for exaggerating the dangers which Greasley faced stating, "Working camps for NCOs such as Greasley were not the tightly-guarded places conjured up by our collective imagination, which is weaned on images from Colditz and The Great Escape.
In fact, bunking out of one’s camp to fraternise with local girls was hardly unusual, and certainly not ‘escaping’ in the sense most of us understand lieutenant"
The February 2010 Telegraph obituary published a photograph captioned "Greasley confronting Heinrich Himmler (wearing the spectacles) in the PoW camp". The photograph and its description was republished by other news sources.
Guy Walters asserted categorically that the soldier in the picture was not Greasley, stating that the picture is held by the United States National Archives and the caption details show it was taken in Minsk (in Belarus) in mid-1941, that it was taken by a photographer for a propaganda film and identifies the soldier as Soviet from his cap, and that the officers in the picture are the same officers who appear in the film with Himmler.