D-Day 1944
Edited by Theodore A. Wilson
Foreword by John S.D. Eisenhower
xxx, 420 pages, 32 photographs, 7 maps, 6 x 9
Modern War Studies
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-0674-0, $22.50
June 6, 1944: the Allies launch
the largest combined aerial and amphibious assault in modern
history. Taking the Germans by surprise, they storm the heavily
fortified defenses at the beachheads along the Normandy coast.
The cost in allied lives is enormous (nearly 10,000 lost at Omaha
alone), but the long-awaited Second Front is finally opened,
marking the beginning of the end for Hitler's Third Reich.
Fifty years later, we are still trying to come to grips with
the impact of what General Dwight Eisenhower called "this
great and noble undertaking." In D-Day 1944 twenty
noted authors reassess the meanings and lessons of this monumental
event and show why it retains such a prominent place in our national
memory.
Drawing upon a vast array of newly available archival sources,
these authors extend and revise our understanding of coalition
warmaking, the controversy over opening the Second Front, the
logistics of operations BOLERO and OVERLORD, air and naval operations,
small unit training and combat, the unique contributions of "special
forces" and of ULTRA and FORTITUDE intelligence, the war
zone experience for French civilians, Eisenhower's military and
diplomatic leadership, and the comparative performances of the
American, British, and Canadian forces in combat.
Combining crisp analysis with provocative insights, D-Day
1944 also features a foreword by prominent historian John
Eisenhower, as well as valuable eyewitness commentaries by General
Omar Bradley, Vice-Admiral Friedrich Ruge (German Navy), Pulitzer
Prize-winning journalist Don Whitehead, and George Marshall's
biographer Forrest Pogue. Together these essays remind us why
a half century later D-Day remains one of the true defining moments
of this epochal conflict.
"D-Day 1944 contains essays by the world's leading
scholars on the invasion of France, covering all aspects of the
greatest amphibious assault in history, combining new information
and scholarship in a highly readable and instructive volume.
Recommended without hesitation or qualification."--Stephen
A. Ambrose, author of Eisenhower and The Great
and Noble Undertaking
"Fifty years is a long time in the action-ridden twentieth
century and yet D-Day seems as new as yesterday. It is not merely
a piece of history, it is unforgettable history. In these thoughtful
and eloquent essays, general readers together with veterans and
their families--children, grandchildren--will see again what
was required during that 'longest day' in the lives of tens of
thousands of America's young men."--Robert H. Ferrell,
editor of The Eisenhower Diaries
"A splendid book that adds considerably to our understanding
of this momentous operation. Required reading for anyone interested
in the history of World War II."--Robert A. Doughty,
author of The Breaking Point: Sedan and the Fall of France,
1940
CONTRIBUTORS: General Omar Bradley, Robert Berlin,
Raymond Callahan, Alexander S. Cochran, Alex Danchev, John S.D.
Eisenhower, Arthur L. Funk, Robin Higham, David Hogan, Maurice
Matloff, Forrest Pogue, Vice Admiral Friederich Ruge, Max Schoenfeld,
Kevin Smith, Mark A. Stoler, Gerhard Weinberg, Don Whitehead,
Theodore A. Wilson, Alan Wilt.
THEODORE A. WILSON is professor of history at the University
of Kansas and general editor of the Modern War Studies
series. He is coeditor of Victory in
Europe 1945: From World War to Cold War and author of
The First Summit: Roosevelt and Churchill
at Placentia Bay, 1941, which won the Francis Parkman
Prize.
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