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Hardcover History of Warfare: The Second World War in the West Book

ISBN: 0304352241

ISBN13: 9780304352241

History of Warfare: The Second World War in the West

(Part of the Cassell History of Warfare Series)

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Book Overview

Germany's defeat in 1918 left the nation resentful--and paved the way for Nazism's ascent and the fierce determination to reverse that loss. Follow the spread of war throughout the world, and the... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Related Subjects

Eastern Europe History

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

A quick review of World War Two

Its a good starter book but it has limitations. I was disappointed with lack of depth that I know Mr Messenger could give it. This book is meant for students and light fans of history. Serious historians or WWII buffs should look elsewhere. There is brief coverage on the Eastern front, Balkans, North Africa, Finland, France, Italy, the Med. There are a number of nice maps to study as your reading the text. I liked the Stalingrad and Kursk as well as Berlin and Normandy maps. There is also a number of interesting photos included. There is a Chronology list to help frame the events of the war. Mr Messenger's "The Chronological Atlas of World War Two" is much better and more informative. If your interest lies in France then Mr Messenger's "The D-Day Atlas" has greater depth and better maps.

Outline history of World War II in the West

Cassell has been publishing these volumes for a year or so now in the United States, to reasonably good reviews. I have read several of them now (I think this is the third, and I have a fourth around here somewhere) and generally my take on them is as with other books: how good they are depends on the author. Gunther Rothenberg, the author of the volume on Napoleon, is an expert on the subject, and that shows in his book. H.P. Wilmott is an expert on carrier warfare and the Pacific War, and he wrote the volume on that, and made some intelligent points. Charles Messenger, the author of the present volume, is considered an expert on World War II in Europe, and especially in mobile warfare, so he gets the assignment here. While he does a very good job overall, he does fall short a bit in places.One problem is scope. Messenger has a lot of ground to cover, but then so did Wilmott in his companion volume. Messenger seems lost sometimes in trying to sort out what he should talk about and what he's going to ignore. He leaves the naval aspect of the war basically aside, and does the same thing with most of the events of the air war. Instead he concentrates on the mobile warfare on the ground, which is after all his area of expertise.Unfortunately, Messenger occasionally lets his British heritage influence influence what he writes about the war. So, for instance, the German troops on Sicily fight against the British and Canadians, while the Americans draw Italian opponents, who are easier to defeat. In reality, one of the American invasion beaches was almost overrun by a German panzer division, which was only stopped by naval gunfire.The Soviet part in the war is dealt with in some detail, given the length of the overall book. Issues such as tank design and unit organization are covered briefly, but concisely. The strategies used by the various sides in prosecuting the war are gone over also, enough to understand the issues involved. Given the proportional sizes of the various armies, though, you could make the argument that the Eastern Front doesn't get its share of the coverage, and that the Western (and especially British) Front gets more than its fair share. Much is made, for instance, of the War in the North African desert. Though the author does note the small size of the forces involved compared with the campaigns in the east, he spends as much time on them anyway.My review, therefore, is a bit mixed. The author certainly isn't John Keegan when it comes to crafting prose. While he's not terrible, he also doesn't come up with unconventional interpretations or reinterpretations of the war and its impact, as some of the other authors in this series do. The maps are tremendous, as always, though at least one is incomplete (the little numbered boxes are blank, unintentionally. It's fun to see if you can fill in the numbers correctly.) and sometimes the text seems only loosely connected to the maps involved.On that note, I think I would only recommend th

Very useful for a comprehensive glance of World War II

This is a very useful book for a quick and comprehensive glance of World War II in the Western Theatre.It is an interesting work that provides a general overview of the major military campaigns in the western theatre of operations.It is well balanced and its maps are very useful, because they provide the reader with the means to analyse quickly the most important operations.This book is a valid part of Cassel's History of warfare, that any reader concerned with military history should read.
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