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Mussolini's Ultimate Guide to WW2 Books

Discussion in 'WWII Books & Publications' started by Mussolini, Jul 18, 2018.

  1. Mussolini

    Mussolini Gaming Guru WW2|ORG Editor

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    We all read them, we all search for them, so I thought 'Why not make a book list that can serve as a guide or stepping off point for people interested in WW2 History?'. So thats what this thread will be.

    Please follow the 'formatting' guide when posting suggestions! I want this list to be easily accessible to everyone browsing it! I want to keep each category to about 10 books each. What those 'top 10 books' in each category will be, will be completely open to debate!

    We will focus on one category at a time. I will update this first post with submitted books and will also inform of which category is open for submittals at a time.
    __________

    Format: (Copy and Paste)

    Code:
    Book Category:
    
    Book Name:
    Bool Author:
    Amazon Link:
    ISBN Number:
    
    Brief Synopsis:
    
    Reason Picked:
    Book Category:
    (Can cover more than one Category)

    Book Name:
    Self Explanatory
    Bool Author: Self Explanatory
    Amazon Link: (Or other easily accessible online retailer - all books suggested MUST be obtainable to the masses!)
    ISBN Number: (For easy lookup)

    Brief Synopsis:
    In a paragraph or two, explain what the book is about.

    Reason Picked: Why are you choosing this book for the list? What are its merits?

    __________


    Categories

    General History (Open for Submissions)
    1. The Second World War - by Winston Churchill​
    Amazon Link: https://www.amazon.com/Second-World...17247&sr=8-7&keywords=winston+churchill+books
    ISBN Number:
    ISBN-13: 978-0395416853
    ISBN-10: 039541685X

    2.

    3.

    4.

    5.

    6.

    7.

    8.

    9.

    10.
     
    Last edited: Jul 19, 2018
    JJWilson likes this.
  2. Mussolini

    Mussolini Gaming Guru WW2|ORG Editor

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    Book Category: General History

    Book Name:
    The Second World War
    Bool Author: Winston S. Churchill
    Amazon Link: https://www.amazon.com/Second-World...17247&sr=8-7&keywords=winston+churchill+books
    ISBN Number:
    ISBN-13: 978-0395416853
    ISBN-10: 039541685X

    [​IMG]

    Brief Synopsis:
    From Amazon:
    In the opening volume, The Gathering Storm, Churchill tracks the erosion of the shaky peace brokered at the end of the First World War, followed by the rise to power of Adolf Hitler and the Nazis and their gradual spread from beyond Germany's borders to most of the European continent. Churchill foresaw the coming crisis and made his opinion known quite clearly throughout the latter '30s, and this book concludes on a vindicating note, with his appointment in May 1940 as prime minister, after which he recalls that "I felt as if I were walking with destiny, and that all my past life had been but a preparation for this hour and for this trial."

    Their Finest Hour concerns itself with 1940. France falls, and England is left to face the German menace alone. Soon London is under siege from the air--and Churchill has a few stories of his own experiences during the Blitz to share--but they persevere to the end of what Churchill calls "the most splendid, as it was the most deadly, year in our long English and British history." They press on in The Grand Alliance, liberating Ethiopia from the Italians and lending support to Greece. Then, when Hitler reneges on his non-aggression pact with the Soviet Union (the very signing of which had proved Stalin and his commissars "the most completely outwitted bunglers of the Second World War"), the Allied team begins to coalesce. The bombing of Pearl Harbor by the Japanese makes the participation of the United States in the war official, and this is of "the greatest joy" to Churchill: "How long the war would last or in what fashion it would end no man could tell, nor did I at that moment care. Once again in our long island history we should emerge, however mauled or mutilated, safe and victorious."

    But as the fourth volume, The Hinge of Fate, reveals, success would not happen overnight. The Japanese military still held strong positions in the Pacific theater, and Rommel's tank corps were on the offensive in Africa. After a string of military defeats, Churchill's opponents in Parliament introduced a motion for a censure vote; this was handily defeated, and victory secured in Africa, then Italy. By this time, Churchill had met separately with both Roosevelt and Stalin; the second half of volume 5, Closing the Ring, brings the three of them together for the first time at the November 1943 conference in Teheran. This book closes on the eve of D-day: "All the ships were at sea. We had the mastery of the oceans and of the air. The Hitler tyranny was doomed."

    And so, in the concluding volume, Triumph and Tragedy, the Allies push across Europe and take the fight to Berlin. President Roosevelt's death shortly before final victory against Germany affected Churchill deeply, "as if I had been struck a physical blow," and he would later regret not attending the funeral and meeting Harry Truman then, instead of at the Potsdam conference after Germany's defeat. Churchill himself would not be there for the conclusion to the war against Japan; in July of 1945, a general election in Britain brought in a Labor government (or, as he refers to them, "Socialists"), and he resigned immediately, for "the verdict of the electors had been so overwhelmingly expressed that I did not wish to remain even for an hour responsible for their affairs."


    Reason Picked:
    Its hard to find a more comprehensive book (or book series) that covers such a broad spectrum or 'General History of the Second World War'. Nor are there any other books like it, written by the leader of a country, which offers a unique perspective on events and especially those meetings and events that took place behind closed doors during the war.
     
    JJWilson likes this.
  3. mconrad

    mconrad New Member

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    Indeed, neither Hitler, Stalin, Roosevelt, or any Japanese leader left such a valuable memoir. But if you can read through six Churchill volumes, you must be able to afford the time to read a more recent critical examination of Churchill's wartime decisions.
     

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