Available:*
Library | Call Number | Status |
---|---|---|
Searching... Hardwood Creek Library (Forest Lake) | 940.5421 AMB | Searching... Unknown |
Bound With These Titles
On Order
Summary
Summary
From the Number One bestselling author of BAND OF BROTHERS comes the story of the ordinary soldiers in Northwest Europe from the day after D-Day until the triumphant end of the war.
Author Notes
Historian Stephen E. Ambrose grew up in Wisconsin and attended the University of Wisconsin and the University of Louisiana.
Ambrose is considered to be one of the foremost historical scholars of recent times and has been a professor for over three decades. He is also the founder and president of the National D-Day Museum in New Orleans.
His works include D-Day: June 6, 1944: The Climactic Battle of World War II, Citizen Soldiers: The U. S. Army from Normandy Beaches to the Bulge to the Surrender of Germany, June 7, 1944-May 7, 1945, Band of Brothers: E Company, 506th Regiment, 101st Airborne from Normandy to Hitler's Eagle's Nest and Undaunted Courage: Meriwether Lewis, Thomas Jefferson and the Opening of the American West. Abrose served historical consultant on the motion picture Saving Private Ryan.
(Bowker Author Biography)
Reviews (4)
Publisher's Weekly Review
The story of the front-line American combatants who took WWII to the Germans from Normandy to the Elbe River makes, in Ambrose's expert hands, for an outstanding sequel to his D-Day (1994). These men are frequently dismissed as winning victories by firepower rather than acknowledged for their individual fighting power. Using interviews and other personal accounts by both German and American participants, Ambrose tells instead the story of enlisted men and junior officers who not only mastered the battlefield but developed emotional resources that endured and transcended the shocks of modern combat. Ambrose's accounts of the fighting in Normandy, the breakout and the bitter autumn struggles for Aachen and the battles in the Huertgen Forest and around Metz depict an army depending not on generalship but on the courage, skill and adaptability of small-unit commanders and their men. The 1945 offensive into Germany was a triumph of a citizen army, but the price was high. One infantry company landed in Normandy on August 8 with 187 men and six officers. By V-E Day, 625 men had served in its ranks. Fifty-one had been killed, 183 wounded and 167 suffered frostbite or trench foot. Nor do statistics tell the whole story. Ambrose's reconstruction of "a night on the line" is a brilliant evocation of physical hardship and emotional isolation that left no foxhole veteran unscarred. It is good to be reminded of brave men's brave deeds with the eloquence and insight that the author brings to this splendid, generously illustrated and moving history. Photos. 250,000 first printing; BOMC and History Book Club main selections, QPB alternate; Reader's Digest Condensed Book. (Nov.) FYI: In an outpouring of Ambrosia, the author has two other books scheduled for fall publication. They are reviewed below. (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Kirkus Review
A worthy sequel to Ambrose's 1994 D-Day. Bestselling historian Ambrose (Undaunted Courage, 1996) uses firsthand recollections of combat veterans on both sides to flesh out his well-researched narrative. He picks up the epic drama by following, almost step by step, various individuals and outfits among the tens of thousands of young Allied soldiers who broke away from the deadly beaches of Normandy and swept across France to the Ardennes, fought the Battle of the Bulge, captured the famed bridge at Remagen, and crossed the wide Rhine to final victory in Europe. Ambrose observes that the US broke the Nazi war machine with massive aerial bombing, artillery, and the great mobility of attacking tanks and infantry. But, he argues, it was not technology but the valor and character of the young GIs and their European counterparts that ultimately proved too much for the vaunted German forces. While generally approving of Allied military leadership, Ambrose faults Eisenhower and Bradley as too conservative and believes the great human and materiel cost of victory could have been reduced by adopting Patton's more innovative and bolder knockout movements. He deplores the sending of inadequately trained 18-year-olds as replacements on the front lines, where they suffered much higher casualty rates than the foxhole-wise GI veterans. The troops fought under the worst possible conditions in the Ardennes, during the worst winter in 40 years; Ambrose describes the long, freezing snowy nights; the wounds, frostbite, and trench foot; and the fatigue and the tensions of facing sudden death or maiming. The troops rallied to drive the enemy back to the Rhine and into Germany, but took some 80,000 casualties. With remarkable immediacy and clarity, as though he had trained a telescopic lens on the battlefields, Ambrose offers a stirring portrayal of the terror and courage experienced by men at war. (109 photos, 9 maps, not seen) (First printing of 250,000; Book-of-the-Month Club/History Book Club main selection; Quality Paperback Book Club alternate selection)
Booklist Review
A continuation of D^-Day (1994), Ambrose's present saga sets its sights on the motivations and experiences of privates and noncoms who slogged across northwestern Europe in the war's last year. Higher ranks appear intermittently, as the remote orderers of an infantryman's, a tanker's, or an airman's contact with the enemy. For nearly half of the ground forces, the war was as lonely as life could possibly be, mainly because of the organizational plan dreamed up by the highest ranked soldier of them all, General George C. Marshall. He created the replacement system, which, instead of rotating whole units from the front line, fed raw individuals into the units. The result, as attested by the abundant memoir literature from which Ambrose liberally quotes, was that the replacements, anonymous and isolated, were deprived of any comradeship, and the veterans they joined despised them as incompetent and dangerous. Veterans didn't bother finding out the names of replacements because they didn't last long. Marshall was also responsible for the inferiority of American tanks to German models; he wanted more, not better, the basic principle that beat down the Wehrmacht. Still, men had to dig foxholes and duck during artillery barrages. Writing about the personal level of combat is Ambrose's forte and has contributed to his reputation as a celebrated military historian. Eschewing all gloss while including the atrocities, the casualties, the rear-area jerks, Jim Crow, the cold, the mud, and the fear, Ambrose solidly coheres disparate facts into a fully faceted story that is bound to be immensely popular. --Gilbert Taylor
Library Journal Review
Military historian and author Ambrose offers a sequel to his best seller, D-Day, June 6, 1944: The Climactic Battle of World War II (LJ 5/1/94). A skillful blending of eyewitness accounts (gathered mostly from the oral history collection at the Univ. of New Orleans's Eisenhower Center and from personal interviews) gives the reader an intimate feel of what war was like for infantrymen in the European theater of operationsfrom the beaches of France to victory at the Elbe River. Additional chapters on the air war, medics, and prisoners of war offer firsthand accounts on topics rarely described in traditional histories. The book complements Paul Fussell's Doing Battle: The Making of a Skeptic (LJ 8/96) and Michael Daubler's Closing with the Enemy: How G.I.'s Fought the War in Europe, 1944-45 (Univ. of Kansas, 1994). This well-written oral history would also make an excellent general text. Highly recommended for all library collections.Richard S. Nowicki, Emerson Vocational H.S., Buffalo, N.Y. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Table of Contents
Maps |
Introduction and Acknowledgments |
Prologue |
Part 1 The Battle for France |
1 Expanding the Beachhead,June 7-30, 1944 |
2 Hedgerow Fighting,July 1-24, 1944 |
3 Breakout and Encirclement,July 25-August 25, 1944 |
4 To the Siegfried Line,August 26-September 30, 1944 |
5 The Siegfried Line,October 1944 |
Part 2 At the German Border |
6 Metz and the Hurtgen Forest,November 1-December 15, 1944 |
7 The Ardennes,December 16-19, 1944 |
8 The Ardennes,December 20-23, 1944 |
9 The Holiday Season,December 24-31, 1944 |
Part 3 Life in ETO |
10 Night on the Line |
11 Replacements and Reinforcements,Fall 1944 |
12 The Air War13 Medics, Nurses, and Doctors |
14 Jerks, Sad Sacks, Profiteers, and Jim Crow |
15 Prisoners of War |
Part 4 Overrunning Germany |
16 Winter War,January 1945 |
17 Closing to the Rhine,February 1-March 6, 1945 |
18 Crossing the Rhine,March 7-31, 1945 |
19 Victory,April 1-May 7, 1945 |
Epilogue:The GIs and Modern America |
Afterword |
Notes |
Bibliography |
Index |