Modern warfare Books
Schiffer Publishing Ltd Japanese War Fantasy 1933
Book SynopsisAn analysis of a 1933 Japanese pulp fiction novel and the foretelling of the coming war.
£17.09
McFarland and Company, Inc. Survival at Stalag IVB Soldiers and Airmen
Book SynopsisIn addition to concentration camps, World War II Germany was also home to 54 prisoner-of-war camps, the largest of which was Stalag IVB. This historical chronicle evokes the heartbreaking reality of day-to-day life in Stalag IVB, with firsthand accounts by the author and other veterans of the camp. Closing chapters detail the camp's final months.
£29.57
Beacon Press Renas Promise
Book SynopsisAn expanded edition of the powerful memoir about two sisters'' determination to survive during the Holocaust featuring new and never before revealed information about the first transport of women to AuschwitzIn March 1942, Rena Kornreich and 997 other young women were rounded up and forced onto the first Jewish transport of women to Auschwitz. Soon after, Rena was reunited with her sister Danka at the camp, beginning a story of love and courage that would last three years and forty-one days. From smuggling bread for their friends to narrowly escaping the ever-present threats that loomed at every turn, the compelling events in Rena’s Promise remind us that humanity and hope can survive inordinate brutality.
£16.19
The University Press of Kentucky JFK and de Gaulle How America and France Failed
Book SynopsisDespite French President Charles de Gaulle's persistent efforts to constructively share French experience and use his resources to help engineer an American exit from Vietnam, the Kennedy administration responded to de Gaulle's peace initiatives with bitter silence and inaction.
£28.80
LUP - University of Georgia Press Captured The Japanese Internment of American
Book SynopsisMore than five thousand American civilian men, women, and children living in the Philippines during World War II were confined to internment camps. Captured tells the story of daily life in five different camps - the crowded housing, mounting familial and international tensions, heavy labour, and increasingly severe malnourishment.
£25.95
University of Missouri Press The Desperate Diplomat Saburo Kurusus Memoir of the Weeks Before Pearl Harbor
Book SynopsisThree weeks prior to the bombing of Pear Harbor, Japanese Special Envoy Saburo Kurusu visited Washington in an attempt to further peace talks. For more than seventy years, many have viewed Kurusu’s visit as part of the Pearl Harbor plot. Garry Clifford and Masako Okura seek to dispel this myth with this edition of Kurusu’s memoir.Trade ReviewA unique and invaluable study of American-Japanese diplomatic history. The authors present a compelling explanation of how Americans-both the general public and critical members of the Roosevelt administration-perceived Kurusu. The authors also highlight Kurusu's relevance in the run-up to war and do much to bring him out from behind Admiral Nomura's shadow, while also presenting a compelling portrait of familiar figures including Secretary of State Cordell Hull and Franklin D. Roosevelt. The use of often overlooked but essential sources such as the Bernard Baruch and Arthur Krock papers make this an impressive volume." - Sidney Pash, author of The Currents of War: A New History of American-Japanese Relations, 1899–1941"This is a fascinating look at the intense negotiations in Washington, D.C., just prior to the Japanese attack Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. It is the view seen by a special Japanese envoy, Saburo Kurusu, who was hurriedly dispatched to Washington in November 1941 to assist Japanese ambassador Kichisaburo Nomura. U.S. and Japanese policies were at loggerheads over the issue of Japanese aggression in China and what appeared to be impending Japanese moves into Southeast Asia. Talks in Washington between Ambassador Nomura and U.S. Secretary of State Cordell Hull were attempting to reconcile the two nations' positions in a vain attempt to prevent eruption of a war." - Air Power History"This book presents the best account in English of the activities of the Japanese diplomats in Washington during the negotiations. As such, it should be required reading for all those interested in the outbreak of the Pacific War." - Journal of American-East Asian Relations"Thanks to the labors of Clifford and Okura, it will be difficult to look again at the last three weeks of peace in quite the same way." - H-Net
£25.60
Bloomsbury Publishing (UK) Desert Screen
Book SynopsisPaul Virilio identifies the Gulf War as a turning point in history, the last industrial and the first information war. Virilio then goes on to argue that we live in a world of global spatio-temporal collapse, and one which seems to preclude the possibility of negotiation and diplomacy.Trade Review"'one of the most original thinkers of our time'. Liberation; 'Virilio writes on the edge of physics, philosophy, politics and urbanism'. New Statesman"Table of ContentsAcknowledgements; Preface by James Der Derian; Desert Screen; I Foreword; II August 1990: Desert Shield; III January 1991: Desert Storm; IV June 1991: Desert Screen; V Virilio Looks Back and Sees the Future: Interview by James Der Derian (2000); Notes; Index
£31.34
Crecy Publishing The Blue Arena
Book Synopsis
£9.49
Raven Oaks Press Heaven in the Midst of Hell
Book SynopsisWar exposes the divide between who we think we are and how we behave in extreme situations. In this book, the author, who served as a Quaker chaplain with the US Navy, presents an unsettling, and ultimately hopeful personal account of the effects of the Iraq war on soldiers and civilians. It is illustrated with the author's own photographs.Trade ReviewA Quaker Chaplain writing about war? I couldnt imagine it, but I agreed to review the book. What a blessing. The book is beautiful: in design and in content. With eight Marines, Commander Sheri Snively deployed to Iraq to serve in a trauma hospital and morgue between Ramadi and Fallujah. She records the journey in vivid detail. Snively took photographs and kept a journal. She writes of impressions of war as she experienced it. She wrestled with the issue of war. As a Quaker, she believed in peace. Together she and her Marines faced life, death, the carnage of war and the effects of PTSD. Snively shares the good and the bad, the beautiful and the ugly, the questions for which there are no answers. - Jim Greenwald, Lead Reviewer, The Military Writers Society of America
£17.21
Miller Publishing, LLC Soldiers Stories A Collection of WWII Memoirs
Book Synopsis
£33.25
Cambridge University Press Americas Wars
Book SynopsisThe collapse of the Soviet Union ushered in American global hegemony in world affairs. In the post-Cold War period, both Democrat and Republican governments intervened, fought insurgencies, and changed regimes. In America''s Wars, Thomas Henriksen explores how America tried to remake the world by militarily invading a host of nations beset with civil wars, ethnic cleansing, brutal dictators, and devastating humanitarian conditions. The immediate post-Cold War years saw the United States carrying out interventions in the name of Western-style democracy, humanitarianism, and liberal internationalism in Panama, Somalia, Haiti, Bosnia and Kosovo. Later, the 9/11 terrorist attacks led America into larger-scale military incursions to defend itself from further assaults by al Qaeda in Afghanistan and from perceived nuclear arms in Iraq, while fighting small-footprint conflicts in Africa, Asia, and Arabia. This era is coming to an end with the resurgence of great power rivalry and rising threTrade Review'Thomas Henriksen has given us a brisk and incisive tour d'horizon of American foreign policy in the three decades since the end of the Cold War. With admirable concision, America's Wars recounts the shifts in U.S. strategic posture from hegemonic hyperpower in the 1990s, to the war on terror in the early 2000s, to emerging great-power competition with China and Russia. And with unmatched clarity and urgency, Henriksen also traces the persistent themes of increasingly high-tech warfare as well as deepening American fatigue with the burdens of 'exuberant internationalism.' Must reading for all who would understand the evolution of the complex threat environment taking shape as the twenty-first century unfolds.' David M. Kennedy, author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning Freedom From Fear: The American People in Depression and War, 1929-1945'This is a rich history of America's post-cold war military interventions: in the past, the United States undertook ambitious interventions, often with less risk of larger conflagrations. In this era of great power competition, the calculations will be more complex. Students and policy makers will benefit from this excellent assessment.' Nadia Schadlow, author of War and the Art of Governance: Consolidating Combat Success into Political Victory'The most glaring truth about the collapse of the Soviet bloc from 1989 to 1991 is that it proved not to be 'the end of history.' As Thomas Henriksen chronicles is this insightful if painful narrative, America's post-Cold War presidents have squandered the nation's power, prestige, and prosperity in one after another 'forever war.'' Walter A. McDougall, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Tragedy of U.S Foreign Policy: How American Civil Religion betrayed the National Interest'In this excellent, balanced, and well-informed survey of US military interventions over the past thirty years, Henriksen provides a sober reminder that salafi jihadist terrorists will not end their war against the United States simply because we declare those wars to be over.' Colin Dueck, author of Age of Iron: On Conservative NationalismTable of ContentsIntroduction; 1. An end and a beginning: From cold war to Panama invasion for regime change; 2. The Persian Gulf war and its aftermath; 3. Wars other than war, wars in Somalia, Haiti, Bosnia, and Kosovo; 4. Afghanistan: Regime change and building society in the graveyard of empires; 5. The Iraq war: Changing a regime, building democracy, and fighting an insurgency; 6. America's small-footprint wars: Asia, Africa, & the Middle East; 7. America's larger forever wars – Afghanistan, Syria, and Iraq; 8. A conclusion: The new era.
£23.99
Cambridge University Press Churchill Chamberlain and Appeasement
Book SynopsisWas Churchill correct when he claimed the Second World War could easily have been prevented if Chamberlain had not appeased Hitler? How far did Churchill and Chamberlain differ on defence and foreign policy? To what extent was Chamberlain responsible for military defeats in 1940? In this new account of appeasement, G. C. Peden addresses these questions and provides a comparative analysis of Chamberlain and Churchill''s views on foreign policy and strategic priorities, explores what deterrence and appeasement meant in the military, economic and political context of the 1930s and where Chamberlain and Churchill agreed and disagreed on how best to deter Germany. Beginning in 1931 when Chamberlain became Chancellor of the Exchequer, this book explores the evolution of British policy towards Germany through to the Munich Agreement and its aftermath within the context of Britain''s power to influence international affairs in the 1930s and of contemporary intelligence.Trade Review'A masterly analysis that takes a fresh approach to appeasement, based on the author's expert knowledge and understanding of both policies and personalities.' Gill Bennett, Former FCO Chief Historian'A rigorous and compelling new look at one of the most important episodes in twentieth-century British and European History.' Richard Toye, University of ExeterTable of ContentsIntroduction; 1. Churchill, Chamberlain and historians; 2. Personalities and policymaking; 3. Britain and the balance of power; 4. The darkening scene; 5. The Ethiopian and Rhineland crises ; 6. Chamberlain takes charge; 7. From the Anschluss to Munich; 8. From Munich to Prague; 9. Deterrence by guarantee; 10. The test of war; 11. Counterfactuals and conclusions.
£29.99
Cambridge University Press Civil War in Europe 19051949
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£75.37
Cambridge University Press The Cambridge World History of Violence
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£133.95
Cambridge University Press World War One
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£67.44
Cambridge University Press Winds of Hope Storms of Discord
Book SynopsisIn brisk and engaging prose, this comprehensive introductory textbook traverses the broad sweep of US history since 1945. Winds of Hope, Storms of Discord explores how Americans from all walks of life political leaders, businesspeople, public intellectuals, workers, students, activists, migrants, and others struggled to define the nation''s political, economic, geopolitical, demographic, and social character. It chronicles the nation''s ceaseless ferment, from the rocky conversion to peacetime in the early aftermath of World War II; to the frightening emergence of the Cold War and repeated US military adventures abroad; to the struggles of African Americans and other minorities to claim a share of the American Dream; to the striking transformations in social attitudes catalyzed by the women''s movement and struggles for gay and lesbian liberation; to the dynamic force of political, economic, and social conservatism. Carrying the story to the spring of 2022, Winds of Hope also shows hTrade Review'Salim Yaqub has mastered the most recent scholarship on such diverse topics as social justice movements, modern conservatism, and the impact of technology, and woven it seamlessly into a deeply engaging narrative of the United States from 1945 to the 2020s. It is not just the wide sweep that impresses, but also the sharp eye for compelling, poignant detail. Personal yet authoritative, trenchant but even-handed, humane and witty, this is historical writing at its very best.' Hugh Wilford, California State University, Long Beach'A sweeping synthesis of US history since World War II. Winds of Change, Storms of Discord shows the author's mastery of the most recent scholarship on foreign policy, social change, and domestic conflict, yet it remains accessible and engaging. Highly recommended for students at all levels as well as general readers.' Kathryn Olmsted, University of California, Davis'Yaqub has set the new standard for histories of post-1945 America. Incredibly complete and up to the minute, Winds of Hope, Storms of Discord is wonderfully readable and filled with careful judgments. Yaqub's writing is marvelously clear and his account is lively as well as precise and authoritative. Students and teachers rejoice!' Doug Rossinow, Metropolitan State University'This is the post-1945 US history textbook you have been waiting for. Comprehensive, concise, and highly readable, Salim Yaqub brilliantly distills the diversity of the American experience from the end of World War II to US support of Ukraine in 2022. Winds of Hope, Storms of Discord is the new standard-bearer for how to write multifaceted US history.' Kathryn Statler, University of San Diego'Filled with twists and turns, Winds of Hope, Storms of Discord sends readers racing through its pages to discover how the world they thought they knew is actually far more interesting - and surprising - than they had previously understood. Salim Yaqub writes with the compassion, objectivity, and fresh curiosity of a master scholar who listens to every voice.' Elizabeth Cobbs, Texas A&M University'Winds of Hope, Storms of Discord by Salim Yaqub is a masterful exploration of US history since 1945. Useful for students in a variety of courses as well as beginning researchers, the book chronicles the often rapid and dramatic changes in US society, culture, politics, technology, economics, and foreign relations during the tumultuous years from the end of World War II through the present. The fact that it ends in 2022 is novel and useful. Despite its ambitious scope, the book has a clear narrative and singular point of view that make it compelling and highly readable. The author deftly weaves together multiple themes to tell a story that is a must-read for anyone who wants to know why the United States today is the way it is.' Kelly J. Shannon, Florida Atlantic UniversityTable of ContentsPreface; Introduction; 1. Wake up Willie: from war to postwar, 1945–1948; 2. We may not now relax our guard: hot war abroad and cold war at home, 1949–1954; 3. It's like turning over a rock: America in the fifties; 4. Listen, Yankee: the transformation of America's Cold War, 1956–1963; 5. Is this America?: civil rights and the liberal movement, 1960–1965; 6. Berkeley Cong: fighting abroad and unraveling at home, 1963–1968; 7. Expletive deleted: the presidency of Richard Nixon, 1969–1974; 8. Great blinding lightbulb: women's rights, gay and lesbian rights, and new understandings of gender, sexuality, and family, 1960–1975; 9. Soylent Green is people: America in the seventies; 10. The picture always overrides: America in the Reagan years, 1981–1989; 11. To look over the horizon: from New Cold War to New World Order, 1981–1991; 12. Triangulation: the nineties and Bill Clinton; 13. Freedom fries: George W. Bush, 9/11, and the Iraq war, 2001–2008; 14. Yes we can't: American politics, 2009–2015; 15. Crossfire hurricane: the Trump years, 2015–2021; Epilogue; Index.
£29.99
Taylor & Francis The Pacific War
Book SynopsisThe Pacific War is an umbrella term that refers collectively to a disparate set of wars, however, this book presents a strong case for considering this assemblage of conflicts as a collective, singular war. It highlights the genuine thematic commonalities in the legacies of war that cohere across the Asia-Pacific and shows how the wars, both individually and collectively, wrought dramatic change to the geo-political makeup of the region. This book discusses the cultural, political and social implications of the Pacific War and engages with debates over the warâs impact, legacies, and continuing cultural resonances. Crucially, it examines the meanings and significance of the Second World War from a truly international perspective and the contributors present fascinating case studies that highlight the myriad of localised idiosyncrasies in how the Pacific War has been remembered and deployed in political contexts. The chapters trace the shared legacy that the individual wars haTrade Review"This book offers a useful collection of essays for scholars and students researching and studying the aftermath and memory of the Second World War in the Asia-Pacific region."KEVIN BLACKBURN, Nanyang Technology University, Singapore, Australian Historical Studies, 47, 2016"The Pacific War certainly offers once-passed-by rich material for statement and test of new conceptions...With the Pacific War’s 75th anniversary soon upon us, we might look forward to more memory, more history. Lighting up fading reminiscence with new conceptions and questions, this collection of stylish essays leads the way."Lamont Lindstrom, University of TulsaTable of ContentsPart I: Remembrance 1. Thinking About the Pacific War 2. De-historicising the Second World War: Diaspora, Nation and the overseas Chinese 3. "A Sideshow to the War in Europe": Nation, Empire and the British Commemoration of the Pacific War 4. Contested Memories of the Pacific War in Australia 5. The Thai-Burma Railway: Aysmmetrical and Transnational Memories Part II: Aftermaths 6. Unfinished business: Legal, Moral and Political Dimensions of the Class ‘B’ and ‘C’ War Crimes Trials in Asia and the Pacific 7. The Pacific War experience of Dutch Eurasian civilians in Java, 1942-48 8. Coercion and Consent: Being ‘Indian’ in Malaya during the Japanese Occupation 9. Revenge Killings in 1945 and their Absence from the Historical Narrative in Singapore Part III: Race, Sex and Culture 10. ‘South Seas Lore: Anthropology, Cultural Determinism and the Pacific War’ 11. Contested Medical Science: Re-examining Japanese Medicine and Filipino Adaptations in the Philippines during the Japanese Occupation Period 12. The "outrage" in Miri: Sex, race and violence and the Second AIF in Sarawak 13. Mothers Darlings: Secrets and Silences in the Wake of the Pacific War
£43.19
Taylor & Francis Ltd The Poetics of Conflict Experience
Book SynopsisSeventy years after the end of the Second World War we still do not fully appreciate the intensity of the lived experience of people and communities involved in resistance movements and subjected to German occupation. Yet the enduring conjunction between individuals, things and place cannot be understated: from plaques on the wall to the beloved yellowing relics of private museums, materiality is paramount to any understanding of conflict experience and its poetics. This book reasserts the role of the senses, the imagination and emotion in the Italian war experience and its remembrance practices by tracing a cultural geography of the everyday material worlds of the conflict, and by digging deep into the multifaceted interweaving of place, person and conflict dynamics. Loneliness, displacement and paranoia were all emotional states shared by resistance activists and their civilian supporters. But what about the Fascists? And the Germans? In a civil war and occupation where shifting aTable of ContentsIntroduction: a poetics of civil war and resistance Baldini dies in the end: journey through a world at war Armchair strategists vs. affective archivesThe materialities of absence The interview process 1 8 September 1943, ‘end of days’: Italy’s capitulation and its dystopian aftermath 1.1 My family history as a story of the resistance 1.2 The genesis of civil war and German occupation 1.3 Materiality and memory1.4 The poetics of storytelling: interviewing, imagining, mapping 2 Unsettling identities 1944 2.1 Identities and the uneasy materiality of conflict 2.2 Materialities and the uncanny 2.3 The partisan experience 2.4 Understanding the Fascists 2.5 Who were the Germans, and what did they want? Germans . . . or Austrians? German self-reflections 2.6 Why weren’t the Allies more helpful? 2.7 Spies: the ultimate uncanny element 3 The lost bodies of the Italian resistance and civil war 3.1 Bodies in the snow 3.2 The body of the fighter Sex Bodily hygiene 3.3 The female body 3.4 The Jewish body in the resistance 3.5 Other bodies 3.6 Saved or dead: the body’s tale 3.7 Reconnaissance in no man’s memory: the grim legend of Buss de la Lum 4 The haunting materiality of storytelling 4.1 Storying affects: wartime rumour as inter-corporeal practise 4.2 The ontogenetic nature of storytelling: the snowball effect 4.3 Action! The historical workings of affect 4.4 Story one: constructing an American OSS agent as the Other 4.5 Story two: the Golden Column of Menarè 4.6 Story three: expected and unexpected emotions 4.7 Conclusion 5 Competing materialities: presence and absence in the material world of the war 5.1 The material turn in the social sciences: things ‘matter’ 5.2 The materiality of the interview 5.3 Wartime tangibilities: on emotional absence-presence 5.4 Frontline materialities: evocative objects and booby traps The eagle and the death cult: Fascists and their materiality Frontline objects 5.5 Absence as an affect: the shadow-play of memory 5.5.1 A paper cenotaph: Bruno’s memento 5.5.2 The night is a thing: the poetics of sleep and sleep deprivation 5.5.3 ‘I shouldn’t have asked them for it’. Wilma’s guilty prize 5.6 Reflections 6 Landscapes of fighting, feeling and hoping: place as material culture 6.1 Hostile landscapes and the vernacular of terror 6.2 The making of places: opportunity and consolation6.3 The unmaking of places Home, falling apart The unlikely comfort of the uplands 6.4 Searching for invisibility: stealth and secrecy in everyday materialities 6.5 The marginality of bodies, the liminality of the river 6.6 Going back 7 The conclusion of a journey through regions of silence By way of foreword 7.1 Compassionate scholarship: using affect and postmemory towards a recognition of the uncanniness of civil war An intermission: Levi, the partisan 7.2 Making place for a future 7.3 Engaging with the poetics of conflict experience 7.3.1 The poetics of violence 7.3.2 The poetics of exclusion 7.4 A past we can know 7.5 Engaging humanely with the materialities of others Appendix Bibliography Index
£41.79
Taylor & Francis Ltd The Vietnam War
Book SynopsisThe Vietnam War examines this conflict from its origins up until North Vietnam's victory in 1975. Historian Mitchell K. Hall's lucid account is an ideal introduction to the key debates surrounding a war that remains controversial and disputed in American scholarship and collective memory. The new edition has been fully updated and expanded to include additional material on the preceding French Indochina War, the American antiwar movement, North Vietnamese perspectives and motivations, and the postwar scholarly debate. The text is supported by a documents section and a wide range of study tools, including a timeline of events, glossaries of key figures and terms, and a rich further reading section accompanied by a new bibliographical essay. Concise yet comprehensive, The Vietnam War remains the most accessible and stimulating introduction to this crucial 20th-century conflict. Table of ContentsChronologyAbbreviationsWho’s WhoGlossaryMapsPart 1: Background1. Roots Of The Vietnam WarPart 2: The Vietnam War2. America Goes To War3. Turning Points4. The End Of The Tunnel5. Conclusion And LegacyPart 3: DocumentsFurther Reading
£36.99
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Second World War British Military Camouflage
Book SynopsisSecond World War British Military Camouflage offers an original approach to the cultures and geographies of military conflict, through a study of the history of camouflage. Isla Forsyth narrates the scientific biography of Dr Hugh Cott (1900-1987), eminent zoologist and artist turned camoufleur, and entwines this with the lives of other camouflage practitioners, to trace the sites of camouflage's developments. Moving through the scientists' fieldsite, the committee boardroom, the military training site and the soldiers' battlefield, this book uncovers the history of this ambiguous military invention, and subverts a long-dominant narrative of camouflage as solely a protective technology. This study demonstrates that, as camouflage transformed battlefields into unsettling theatres of war, there were lasting consequences not only for military technology and knowledge, but also for the ethics of battle and the individuals enrolled in this process.Trade ReviewAn insightful and revealing study of an interdisciplinary technology with a darker, more complicated past than immediately meets the eye ... for anyone interested in the interplay between war and culture, as well as the very human stories that are so often hidden behind military technologies. * British Journal for Military History *[Forsyth] makes good use of a range of biographical and archival materials to clarify the interdisciplinary and creative nature of camouflage technology, as it was advanced by key, influential camoufleurs … [A] book filled with valuable new insights into the development of British military camouflage in the Second World War. * Michigan War Studies Review *Of books on World War II camouflage, Isla Forsyth’s is among the most engaging. Its lasting contribution comes from her keen observations of the interplay between art, science and technology, as well as her revelations about the pivotal achievements of Scottish zoologist, scientific illustrator, photographer, and British Army camoufleur Hugh B. Cott. Forsyth's book is an important and welcome addition to the ongoing worldwide discussion about the art and science of camouflage—and surveillance. * Roy R. Behrens, Professor of Art and Distinguished Scholar, University of Northern Iowa, USA *This absorbing account shows the development of camouflage to have been contingent on people, on technologies and on places. Drawing on extensive archival research, Isla Forsyth presents a new history of camouflage which reveals much about this intriguing and innovative technology. * Rachel Woodward, Professor of Human Geography, Newcastle University, UK *Table of ContentsList of Figures Acknowledgements Abbreviations Introduction: A Genealogy of Camouflage 1. Dazzling and Disrupting Conflict 2. Hiding in Plain Sight 3. The Politics of Position 4. Tricksters Transformed to Soldiers 5. Fleurs on the Offensive Conclusion: Afterlives Notes References
£33.24
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC The Dark Heart of Hitlers Europe
Book SynopsisAfter the German attack on Poland in 1939, vast swathes of Polish territory, including Warsaw and Krakow, were occupied by the Nazis in an administration which became known as the ''General Government''. The region was not directly incorporated into the Third Reich but was ruled by a German regime, headed by the brutal and corrupt Governor General Hans Frank. This was indeed the dark heart of Hitler''s empire. As the first genuine Nazi colony, the General Government became the principal ''racial laboratory'' of the Third Reich. As such, it was the site, and main source of victims, of Aktion Reinhard, the largest killing operation in human history in which at least 1.7 million Jews were murdered in just 18 months, and of a campaign of terror, exploitation and ultimately ethnic cleansing against the Polish population which was intended to serve as a template for the rest of eastern Europe. It was a place where 42,000 people could be shot in two days, where thousands of childrenTrade ReviewA perceptive account of one of the darkest periods in human history... this book deserves a wide readership, and should be considered vital in shaping our understanding of the brutal realities of Nazi ideology and the unrelenting horror of the Holocaust. * Jonathan Eaton, Military History *Table of ContentsList of Illustrations Acknowledgements List of Abbreviations Notes on Place Names and Sources Introduction: 'The Wild East' 1. 'The Devil’s Work': Origins 2. 'Gangster Gau': The Regime 3. 'Gentlemen, we are not murderers': Early Measures 4. 'Something big is coming': Barbarossa 5. 'The second war': Everyday Life 6. 'That accursed year': Aktion Reinhard 7. 'The crying of the children': Ethnic Cleansing 8. 'the blood of fighting Poland': Resistance 9. 'Herr Roosevelt's list': Collapse Epilogue: 'A study of human madness' Notes Bibliography Index
£18.99
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Family Histories of World War II
Book SynopsisExpertly contextualized by two leading historians in the field, this unique collection offers 13 accounts of individual experiences of World War II from across Europe. It sees contributors describe their recent ancestors' experiences ranging from a Royal Air Force pilot captured in Yugoslavia and a Spanish communist in the French resistance to two young Jewish girls caught in the siege of Leningrad. Contributors draw upon a variety of sources, such as contemporary diaries and letters, unpublished postwar memoirs, video footage as well as conversations in the family setting. These chapters attest to the enormous impact that war stories of family members had on subsequent generations. The story of a father who survived Nazi captivity became a lesson in resilience for a daughter with personal difficulties, whereas the story of a grandfather who served the Nazis became a burden that divided the family. At its heart, Family Histories of World War II concerns human experiences in suprTrade ReviewThe stories in this anthology are gripping … This book will make an excellent text for courses on World War II, especially ones focusing on the social history of the conflict … Historians and social scientists seeking to document the current war in Ukraine should definitely add this work to their bookshelf. * Journal of Family History *An interesting, unusual and often moving book. This draws on family memories of the Second World War mainly from amongst people, with many national origins, who now work at the tranquil campus of the National University of Ireland at Galway. Edited by experienced historians but written by a wide range of people (mainly but not exclusively academics),and recounting the experiences of an even wider group of people from an earlier generation, it combines the immediacy of personal experience with scholarly rigour. It will be a stimulating book for any undergraduate class as well as being a compelling work for many general readers. * Richard Vinen, Professor of History, King's College London, UK *Historians have spent far too little time studying the impact of war on families through the generations. This wonderful volume fills that gap with dignity, intelligence, and compassion. * Michael S. Neiberg, Inaugural Chair of War Studies, United States Army War College, USA *The power of Healy and Barry’s book lies in the way the stories are told. ... the essays are moving and fascinating in equal measure, and can help the reader understand how the war impacted on individual lives in a way that traditional narrative histories often fail to achieve. * Who Do You Think You Are? Magazine *Table of ContentsList of Figures List of Tables Acknowledgments Notes on Contributors 1. From Generation to Generation: World War II Narratives in Transition, Róisín Healy (NUI Galway, Ireland) and Gearóid Barry (NUI Galway, Ireland) Part I. Lives in Uniform: Enduring Combat and Captivity 2. Nothing Spectacular to Remember? Dealing with Wartime Memories in a German Family, Hans-Walter Schmidt-Hannisa (NUI Galway, Ireland) 3. The Returning POW and a Wartime Volunteer: A Love Story, Sheena Fennell (NUI Galway, Ireland) and Gill Fennell (Independent Scholar, Ireland) 4. Educating Friends and Enemies: An Irishman’s Experiences in Wartime Britain, Patricia Scully (NUI Galway, Ireland) 5. The Diary of an Italian Officer in Nazi Concentration Camps, 1943-1945: The Forgotten History of Italian Military Internees, Marina Ansaldo (NUI Galway, Ireland) 6. Behind Enemy Lines: The Story of an American Soldier and the Italian Family who Saved Him, Colleen Maloney Williamson (Independent Scholar, USA) and Maureen Maloney (NUI Galway, Ireland) 7. From El Alamein to Bergen-Belsen: An Irish Dental Officer's War, Ciara Boylan (NUI Galway, Ireland) 8. Recording the War in Connemara: A Guianese Sailor in the Eastern Mediterranean, Cormac Ó Loideáin (NUI Galway, Ireland) Part II. Lives under Seige: Coping with Occupation 9. A Spanish Communist in the French Resistance: Uncle Luís and a German Map, Sara Farrona (NUI Galway, Ireland) 10. A Boy in Small-Town Germany from Home Front to Allied Occupation, Hermann Rasche (NUI Galway, Ireland) 11. A Child’s View of War: Nazi Occupation, Resistance, and Civil War in Northeastern Italy, 1943-1945, Enrico Dal Lago (NUI Galway, Ireland) 12. A Greek Tragedy: A Small Village at War, Constantinos G. Efthymiou (NUI Galway, Ireland) 13. A Russian Jewish Family Remembers the Siege of Leningrad, Irina Ruppo (NUI Galway, Ireland) 14. Slave Labour and its Legacies: My Maternal Grandparents' Journey from Ukraine to Germany to Belgium, Sylvie Mossay (NUI Galway, Ireland) Select Further Reading Notes Index
£20.89
Pen & Sword Books Ltd The Last German Victory
Book SynopsisThought-provoking new account of Operation Market Garden in 1944.
£21.25
Pen & Sword Books Ltd The Second World War Illustrated
Book SynopsisUS action on the Guadalcanal.
£16.99
Pen & Sword Books Ltd The Brookwood Killers
Book SynopsisExplores a tragic and little-known aspect of the Home Front in wartime Britain.
£21.25
Pen & Sword Books Ltd Sniper in Helmand
Book SynopsisThe first account by a trained sniper in Afghanistan.
£13.49
Pen & Sword Books Ltd The Tanks of Operation Barbarossa
Book SynopsisRevealing study of the Soviet and German tanks at the beginning of the war on the Eastern Front.
£13.49
Pen & Sword Books Ltd The Wolf Children of the Eastern Front
Book SynopsisWhen the Iron Curtain falls in the early 1990s, the incredible life stories of the last surviving victims of WWII emerge: German children who had been left behind and forgotten when the Red Army had invaded East Prussia.
£21.25
Pen & Sword Books Ltd On Spartan Wings
Book SynopsisThe forgotten story of Greece's heroic airmen and their contribution to victory.
£13.49
Pen & Sword Books Ltd The War of the Gunboats
Book SynopsisTraces the development of these fast small craft.
£13.49
Pen & Sword Books Ltd Allied Victory Over Japan 1945
Book SynopsisIn 1944 with the war in Europe turning in the Allies' favour, Japan still occupied vast swathes of South East Asia and the Pacific.In Burma, the seemly unstoppable Japanese advance was halted at Kohima and Imphal in June and July 1944. Six months later the advances made by British-led forces enabled the re-opening of the supply routes from India to US forces in China. It was not until Spring 1945 that British-led forces seized first Mandalay and then the port city of Rangoon after a year of gruelling fighting.Admiral Nimitz's and General MacArthur's forces meanwhile were overcoming fanatical Japanese resistance as they invaded Saipan, Guam, Tinian, Leyte and Luzon in late 1944. Iwo Jima and Okinawa fell to the Allies in early 1945. These successes enabled USAAF Superfortresses to bomb mainland Japan. Late Spring/early Summer 1945 saw the steady recapture of the Northern Solomons and Brunei, Borneo and former Dutch colonies. The Soviets were advancing into Manchuria and Korea.The atomic
£17.09
Pen & Sword Books Ltd Defending Putins Empire
Book SynopsisClearly portrays the development of the Russian air and ballistic missile defence.
£21.25
Pen & Sword Books Ltd Enemy Sighted
Book SynopsisExplores the Battle of Britain Bunker's history and its role in defending the UK.
£21.25
Pen & Sword Books Ltd Fighting Through to Anzio
Book SynopsisThis is the inspiring story of two Gordon Highlanders Territorial Army battalions which saw action in some of the Second World War's fiercest battles.After evacuation from Dunkirk, 6th Gordons fought in Tunisia in 1943, leading to the German surrender in North Africa. Following a spell in Iraq, the 1st London Scottish fought in Sicily and then the Battle of Monte Cassino where Private George Mitchell won his posthumous Victoria Cross, the most prestigious of the numerous gallantry awards to the men of both battalions.In January 1944, the 6th Gordons were the first British battalion ashore at Anzio. While the landing was unopposed, the Germans mounted devastating counter-attacks but, despite almost 400 killed, wounded and captured, the Battalion heroically held on. The 1st London Scottish arrived to fight alongside their Regimental brethren' suffering equally heavy devastating casualties.After the break-out, the Gordons pipe band led the liberation parade in Rome. Both battalions went o
£21.25
Pen & Sword Books Ltd Panther German Army Medium Tank
Book SynopsisTechnical details as well as modifications introduced during production and in the field are also examined, providing everything the modeller needs to recreate an accurate representation of these historic vehicles.
£17.09
Pen & Sword Books Ltd Operation C3
Book SynopsisDetailed land, naval; and air orders of battle have been compiled from Italian, German, British and Maltese archive sources.
£21.25
Pen & Sword Books Ltd Hitler s Shattered Dreams of Empire
Book SynopsisComprehensive analysis of Hitler's role as supreme military leader of the Third Reich. Second of three books looking at how Hitler was able to install himself as supreme leader of the Army, Luftwaffe and Kriegsmarine.
£21.25
Pen & Sword Books Ltd The Secret Betrayal of Britains Wartime Allies
Book SynopsisFirst-hand recollections of post-war activities on both sides of the Iron Curtain.
£13.49
Pen & Sword Books Ltd Bomber Command 19361968
Book SynopsisA unique approach containing all the fundamental information the aviation enthusiast or historian is likely to require.
£16.99
Pen & Sword Books Ltd Air Battle for Arnhem
Book SynopsisOver sixty years ago a battle took place that, if it had succeeded, could have shortened the Second World war by six months. The operation to take the bridges at Arnhem was given the code name ''Operation Market Garden'', Market being the air side of the operation and Garden the subsequent ground operation. The main problem was communications between the ground forces and the re-supply aircraft of the Royal Air Force.Its their efforts and the courage on evident display at Arnhem that the book is based upon. Over a period of seven days troops of the 1st Airborne were taken by the RAF in towed gliders and then in subsequent days showed courage of the highest order to make sure that the ground troops were supplied with ammunition and food to sustain them in their efforts to take the bridges at Arnhem. Their efforts were costly, 309 aircrew and 79 Air Dispatchers were killed and 107 aircraft, which included the men and aircraft who supported the main re-supply armada. One of the re-supply
£13.49
Pen & Sword Books Ltd The Malayan Emergency
Book SynopsisThe Battalion's experiences are well recorded here and typify those of tens of thousand servicemen whose efforts secured a unique victory.
£17.09
Pen & Sword Books Ltd Schnellboote
Book SynopsisThe history of fast attack craft is a perennial favourite amongst naval enthusiasts. New, affordable paperback edition. Large selection of rare photographs.
£13.49
Pen & Sword Books Ltd The Allied Assault on Hitlers Channel Island
Book SynopsisExplains how the Channel Islands were demilitarised in 1940 to save them from destruction.
£21.25
Pen & Sword Books Ltd The Milk Cows
Book SynopsisThe U-Boat campaign has a huge following. The only book on this unusual and vital aspect of U-Boat operations. A considerably expanded and revised edition of an earlier book published in the UK, USA and Germany.
£13.49
Xlibris Korea
Book Synopsis
£21.85
Xlibris The Korean War
Book Synopsis
£14.00
Xlibris Us Widowmaker
Book Synopsis
£19.90
Xlibris My Dear Dear Rigmor
Book Synopsis
£21.85