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Alan Clark : Barbarossa
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Author: Alan Clark
Title: Barbarossa
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Published in: English
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 560
Date: 1985-06-25
ISBN: 0688042686
Publisher: William Morrow
Weight: 1.73 pounds
Size: 6.02 x 1.5 x 9.02 inches
Edition: First Edition
Amazon prices:
$0.01used
$1.85new
$12.89Amazon
Previous givers: 1 Cathy (USA: OH)
Previous moochers: 1 Donald41 (USA: NM)
Wishlists:
2WebsterViennaLibrary (Austria), John Bailey (United Kingdom).
Description: Product Description

On June 22, 1941, before dawn, German tanks and guns began firing across the Russian border. It was the beginning of Hitler's Operation Barbarossa, one of the most brutal campaigns in the history of warfare. Four years later, the victorious Red Army has suffered a loss of seven million lives. Alan Clark's incisive analysis succeeds in explaining how a fighting force that in one two-month period lost two million men was nevertheless able to rally to defeat the Wehrmacht. The Barbarossa campaign included some of the greatest episodes in military history: the futile attack on Moscow in the winter of 1941-42, the siege of Stalingrad, the great Russian offensive beginning in 1944 that would lead the Red Army to the historic meeting with the Americans at the Elbe and on to victory in Berlin.

Barbarossa is a classic of miltary history. This paperback edition contains a new preface by the author.


Amazon.com Review
Many histories of the Second World War written by American and English authors downplay Russia's critical role in the Allied triumph over Germany. Some of this has to do with the Cold War rivalry that emerged after 1945, and perhaps more of it comes from a lack of Russian source material and unfamiliarity with the Russian language. In any event, Alan Clark's classic study of the Eastern Front remains the best book on the subject, "the greatest and longest land battle which mankind has ever fought." These pages concentrate on four major events: Moscow in the winter of 1941, Stalingrad, the Kursk offensive in 1943, and the battles on the Oder at the start of 1945. The author, first a historian and later Margaret Thatcher's secretary of state, suggests that the Russians might very well have won the war on their own, or at least fought the Germans to a standstill, without American intervention. He also makes the provocative point that Hitler's military instincts were often quite good, and usually better than his generals'--contrary to received wisdom. Barbarossa is a reliable and readable account.

URL: http://bookmooch.com/0688042686
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