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The Second World War [Hardcover]

Antony Beevor
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
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Book Description

Jun 5 2012
Over the past two decades, Antony Beevor has established himself as one of the world's premier historians of WWII. His multi-award winning books have included Stalingrad and The Fall of Berlin 1945. Now, in his newest and most ambitious book, he turns his focus to one of the bloodiest and most tragic events of the twentieth century, the Second World War.

In this searing narrative that takes us from Hitler's invasion of Poland on September 1st, 1939 to V-J day on August 14th, 1945 and the war's aftermath, Beevor describes the conflict and its global reach--one that included every major power. The result is a dramatic and breathtaking single-volume history that provides a remarkably intimate account of the war that, more than any other, still commands attention and an audience.

Thrillingly written and brilliantly researched, Beevor's grand and provocative account is destined to become the definitive work on this complex, tragic, and endlessly fascinating period in world history, and confirms once more that he is a military historian of the first rank.

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Review

Praise for THE SECOND WORLD WAR:

"[Beevor's] book is the definitive history. This is World War II as Tolstoy would have described it - the great and the small." (Washington Post)

"Antony Beevor's The Second World War is simply the ultimate Second World War history: it brings these vast events to life, from high strategy to suffering humanity, from the dictators to the ordinary soldier." (Daily Telegraph Simon Sebag Montefiore)

"A powerful narrative of World War II...a gripping account...Beevor's trademark...is the use of eyewitness testimony to deliver haunting particulars." (New York Times Book Review Richard Toye)

"Ever present is Beevor's skill in blending the strategizing of military chiefs with the ordinary soldiers they ordered about. . . Few will match his masterly overview, and no one will be unmoved by the ordeals and achievements that he so powerfully describes." (Globe and Mail)

"The Second World War is a comprehensive capstone...a page-turner...[and] a kaleidoscope of individual experiences in a context of continuous choices...[Beevor's] command of a comprehensive spectrum of sources enables him to present the war from the perspective of its participants...Beevor brilliantly shows, at all levels, that WWII defies easy generalization." (Publishers Weekly)

"Beevor has delivered an epic, brilliantly researched work on the defining event of the 20th century... his new research and his pitch-perfect narrative represent a truly astonishing display of art and craft... This book, which crowns Beevor's distinguished and bestselling career, is one of the nonfiction events of the decade and for this reader, is by far the best nonfiction of 2012 to date." (Sarasota Herald-Tribune Stephen Frater, author of Hell Above Earth)

"In this kaleidoscopic, one-volume account, a prize-winning historian shows his eye for telling anecdotes, his command of myriad facts, his sharply evocative prose and his skill at conjuring the big picture." (New Orleans Times-Picayune)

"Anyone looking for a comprehensive military history of the Second World War that combines high strategy and politics but also takes full account of the war's human dimensions need look no further." (Winnipeg Free Press)

"A general history of the war needs to embrace this variety of experience and capture the interplay between the momentous events unfolding on different continents and the high seas. Antony Beevor effectively meets this challenge. A former British army officer and author of admired works on Stalingrad and the Allied invasion of Normandy, Beevor is a gifted writer who knows how to keep a good story rolling. . . The brutality and courage of individual soldiers and civilians emerge in Beevor's powerful accounts. . . Beevor's book is a pleasure to read and an example of intelligent, lively historical writing at its best." (The Financial Times)

"Every page is imbued with the sense that this man really knows what he is talking about ... Beevor's human and logistical capacities, in combination, inform the gripping accounts of some of the great set-piece confrontations that determined the outcome of the war." (Peter Clarke, The New Republic)

"Antony Beevor makes the reader believe in the impossible: that he could write a history of magisterial authority about the greatest war of modern times and do justice to the global reach of that war...." (The Washington Times)

"Readers who may instinctively recoil from another book about the worldwide turmoil of 1939-1945 would be unwise to ignore this one. . . Always at ease with the conduct of battle, Beevor displays his grasp of the German Army's professionalism and tactical skill at all levels of command, as well as Stalin's metamorphosis from paranoid political tyrant to master of history's most enormous battlefield. . . Once action is joined and false assumptions are exposed, Beevor is ruthless in dissecting them, whether featured in the fortunes of friend, foe or - despite their grit and resolve - in our own armed forces." (The Times Michael Tillotson)

"Brilliantly written...Beevor's account [is] incomparably vivid...[a] magnificently readable book." (The New York Review of Books)

"You feel yourself being carried along on the narrative flow, channeled this way and that through the pools and rapids by Beevor's expert helmsmanship. As we have come to expect from the author, great events are leavened by telling vignettes and anecdotes." (Standpoint Patrick Bishop)

"An outstanding example of narrative history at its best, at once scholarly, enlightening, entertaining and thought-provoking." (The Tablet)

"Everything is pared down to serve the relentless thrust of his storytelling. The result is a magnificent performance - true excitement from one page to the next delivered in faultless prose. . . Beevor offers superbly vivid accounts, often with tiny details that will surprise even those who gorge themselves on shot and ball histories." (Daily Express Christopher Silvester)

"The chapters on the Nazi-Soviet war find Beevor at the top of his game, in command of a huge range of sources, with a fine eye for place and detail, deftly manipulating incident and character, and making effective use of soldiers' diaries and letters to create a vast human tapestry of war. The prose is relaxed and contains a spring in every paragraph. He excels too at grand strategy - as a diplomatic historian, he is a match for AJP Taylor. The conferences at Casablanca, Tehran, Yalta and so on, which can have their longeurs, here sparkle with wit and insight, especially into the behaviour of Stalin. There are revelations too." (Observer Ben Shephard)

"This book is a perfect mixture of world history and human experience, unbiased and highly readable." (The Journal)

"Brocaded with details of the great campaigns and thoughtful explanations of Hitler's murderous belligerency, The Second World War is an absorbing, unsparingly lucid work of military history...exceptionally powerful." (The Spectator Ian Thomson)

"Antony Beevor's remarkably informative and well-written book . . . Beevor's enormous strength is that he can sketch out complicated campaigns clearly. . . Antony Beevor has done splendid justice to this [the bombing of Germany] and to a very great deal else." (Literary Review Norman Stone)

"A war epic close to perfection." (Mail on Sunday)

"The level of operational command, rather than grand strategy or the horrors of front line experience, shapes the magisterial narrative of the Second World War. Its military history is presented chronologically, with chapter titles which convey the simultaneity and interconnectedness of events in very different theatres. This is the place to begin if you need to get your knowledge of the war in order. Beevor is not afraid to quote the familiar when it is important or to let his favourite voices have their say but he also provides plenty of fresh insights for those who kid themselves that they know the story already." (Evening Standard Hew Strachan)

"This is history writ large. . . unexpected vignettes linger in the memory." (Daily Telegraph)

"This memorable vignette is one of hundreds in Antony Beevor's utterly absorbing history of the Second World War. Beevor is justly celebrated for recounting the human realities of war. . . Beevor is committed to telling the truth about war, with all its painful contradictions. . . Beevor does not flinch: this is as comprehensive and objective account of the course of the war as we are likely to get, and the most humanly moving to date." (New Statesman John Gray)

"Judged against his own high standards of readability there is no doubt that The Second World War succeeds very well indeed. . . This is an immensely readable book, not least for the manner in which it blends together high strategy with the view from below. . . A masterful narrative history." (History Today )

"If you only know the outlines of World War II, I would very heartily recommend it." (Ta-Nehisi Coates, The Atlantic )

"His monumental and magisterial history of the Second World War . . . Beevor is excellent at catching the individual in the flood tide of events. . . Few can match his superbly controlled narrative." (Sunday Express)

"With engaging prose and a remarkable ability to clarify and simplify massive and complex events, Beevor has once again demonstrated why he is a pre-eminent historian on the subject...the book is essential reading for anyone seeking to learn more about World War II and its consequences...[it] is always captivating and informative...It is hard to imagine how he will ever top this masterpiece of historical scholarship." (Army Magazine)

"The narrative never flags and the myriad pieces of this intricate kaleidoscope are pieced together with exemplary skill...This is a splendid book, erudite, with admirable clarity of thought and expression." (The Independent on Sunday Roger Moorhouse)

Praise for D-DAY:

"Glorious, horrifying...D-Day is a vibrant work of history that honors the sacrifice of tens of thousands of men and women." (Time)

"One of Beevor's strengths is his ability to describe the day-to-day experience of ordinary soldiers: the food, the weather, the smells, the humor, the fear. . . Perhaps this is what makes Beevor's D-Day such terrific reading. It details the shattering reality of D-Day and the months of savage fighting that followed instead of offering empty mythologizing. This is that rare hardcover worth your valuable attention and money." (USA Today)

"The first impression on seeing D-Day on the bookshelf might be a question, "Why yet another book on D-Day?" The answer comes through in the detailed research and exhaustive treatment of individual stories as the Allies lodged ashore and then advanced on that fateful day and after, all the way to Paris...For anyone with any interest at all in World War II in Europe, especially the time from the landings through the liberation of Paris, D-Day is the book for you." (Washington Times Vice-Admiral Robert F. Dunn)

"This is a superb book and a model of the historian's craft. It stands as the best one-volume history of this decisive military engagement." (Christian Science Monitor)

"His account of atrocities on both sides, of errors committed and of surpassing bravery makes for excellent -- though often blood-soaked -- reading. Beevor gets better with each book." (Kirkus Reviews)

"Beevor's history is becoming World War II's definitive account. (Minneapolis Star-Tribune)

"Beevor's book is a great look at how we think about "good" and "evil." (Ta-Nehisi Coates, The Atlantic)

About the Author

Antony Beevor served as a regular officer in the 11th Hussars in Germany. He is the author of Crete-The Battle and the Resistance, which won a Runciman Prize, Paris After the Liberation, 1944-1949 (written with his wife Artemis Cooper), Stalingrad, which won the Samuel Johnson Prize, the Wolfson Prize for History and the Hawthornden Prize for Literature, Berlin-The Downfall, which received the first Longman-History Today Trustees' Award, The Mystery of Olga Chekhova and, most recently, the bestseller, D-Day. He lives in London.

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Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews
23 of 23 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Very good overview of the biggest war in history July 3 2012
By A. Volk #1 REVIEWER #1 HALL OF FAME
Format:Hardcover
World War II is perhaps the textbook illustration of "epic" when it comes to history. Nothing before (or thankfully) since comes even close to matching its vast scope and influence. The staggering human cost of the war, in both casualties and suffering, is awesome. Now I should note that none of these statements is in any way meant to glorify the war or minimize its horror. Indeed, it is worth remembering that World War II was the most gruesome, savage, and loathesome display of human behavior in history.

It's with that in mind that Antony Beevor tells the overall story of the war. He captures its "world" effect by starting in Asia with Japan, China, and the USSR. For the war really, in many ways, began with Japan's invasion of mainland East Asia. Like much of the war that is non-American or European, this is a neglected and often ill-understood portion of the war. Yet almost as many Chinese died as Soviets (~20 million each), which is over 40x the number of casualties the United States AND the United Kingdom suffered in the war (~.5 million each). Each is over 400x the number of casualties that Canada suffered (~45K- Germany suffered ~7-8 million). Staggering is the only word I can think of to describe these numbers. Yet Beevor, in his usual style, injects real human details into these numbers. Murder, rape, torture, genocide, and even cannibalism are documented in this book. Truly WW2 was awful in every sense of the word, and it is very important for historians to keep reminding us of these very unpleasant, but important facts.

Beevor doesn't dwell on any particular aspect of the war for long. An 800 page, 50 chapter book might seem like a lot, but for a conflict of this magnitude, it's really only enough for a brief overview of the different stages of the war. For those familiar with WW2 history, much of this will not be new. In that sense, it is a three or four star book. However, the writing and the descriptions make it worth reading. Beevor is a skilled author who keeps the pace moving along at a fast clip. The downside is that there isn't a whole lot of analysis or introspection. But again, there is only so much one book can do. Beevor does spend a decent part of his book discussing the leaders and politicians who helped guide the course of the war. In particular, for many Western readers, the actions of Stalin, the Chinese, and the Japanese may be new and revealing. It is light on tactical and specific details (e.g., equipment analysis), a little light on logistical details (e.g., production figures), and sometimes skims over important material (e.g., the Battle of Britain gets relatively little press). That said, it's fair to say that overall this book is more descriptive than analytical. Anyone who wants to analyze the details of a particular battle, or even campaign, is probably better off with a more specific book.

So why five stars? Simply put, I did not expect a single book about WW2 to be perfect unless it was thousands of pages long. In which case I'd probably ding it for being too long! Beevor's book pushes the limit of what a single book can accomplish. For those unfamiliar with the war in its entirety, this is a fabulous introduction. There is a vast literature that delves into greater depths, but this is a good, non-biased place to start. For those more familiar with the war, there are still enough new facts (and in particular, descriptions) to keep the book interesting and make it worth reading. Which is a good thing, because this is one war we cannot afford to ever forget about. Perhaps its only bright spot is that it effectively ended large-scale wars between large nations (i.e., global war). That "achievement" will only remain standing so long as we remember the suffering, agony, and human cost of our last World War. Beevor's book is a strong effort to make sure that we do.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars “The Second World War defies generalization” Jan 21 2013
By Jeffrey Swystun TOP 50 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
Following the download of this book, I had a moment of buyer’s remorse. Why was I purchasing yet another history of The Second World War? Having read many covering the entire war and greater numbers on various aspects of the conflict, was I really going to discover anything I had not already learned?

My interest in this period can be traced back to the books in my father’s den. Among them was a collection from Time-Life on the war. I can still visualize the photo of Wavell & O’Connor discussing strategy in the desert, the Japanese tanker’s flame-thrown skull, and the sailor kissing the nurse in Times Square. Those images were the catalyst for decades of military history reading. Thankfully, historians like Beevor, Atkinson, Evans and others have done us a service with fresh, rich research and writing.

Beevor’s decision to tackle this “amalgamation of conflicts” must have been daunting. The scale of the conflict boggles the mind. The complexity of decision-making and the range of personalities involved will never truly be comprehended. I have tended to follow the Western conflict more and specifically the ground battles but Beevor does an admirable job in the Pacific (and with the air and sea wars). In fact, he contends and shows how the German and Japanese conflicts deeply influenced each other and states that the “Second World War defies generalization”.

Not only was the Second World War an amalgamation of conflicts, it’s origins were an amalgam of issues dating back to the Treaty of Versailles and earlier. Beevor’s treatment begins with a satisfying analysis and review of those issues whereas so many histories commence with Germany’s invasion of Poland. It was a war of ideology on the surface but when it is objectively analyzed, economics were underpinning both Germany and Japan’s motivations and decision-making.

There is one thread in the book that is not emphasized by Beevor and that is the impact of the fall of France and the resulting Vichy government. Throw in the performances of Petain, Gamelin, Darlan, Wygand, Reynaud, and de Gaulle and it becomes difficult to find one single thing that is positive about French conduct. Even the storied Resistance is being exposed as not as widespread or effective as it has been credited. It may be that post-war propaganda created an inflated mystique to make up for the sins of Vichy.

I am not that harsh and recognize that though strategically and tactically bested, many French formations fought with valor in 1940. For me, it is the fact that France’s capitulation had such huge and far-flung ramifications. Without the captured French motor-transport, Hitler would have been severely limited in mobility during the invasion of the Soviet Union and Japanese aircraft flying from Vichy airfields in Indochina would not have sunk British vessels. Perhaps more fascinating is how France’s fall impacted its colonies including laying the groundwork for the extended Vietnam conflict. So much turned on the Fall of France that it is worthy of a separate treatment.

But many aspects of World War Two require their own study given its magnitude. The conflict in China is another example. The Communists did not deserve to win the country given their strategy and performance against the Japanese – it was both cowardly and opportunistic. Certainly the Nationalists were corrupt but at least they were fighting for China and running the country at the same time. And that fighting tied up close to 700,000 Japanese soldiers that benefited the Allies’ Asia campaign immensely.

Another aspect needing its own history is Ukraine and the Nationalist movements who tried to use the conflict to gain independence. According to Beevor “older, more religious Ukrainians had been encouraged by the black crosses on the German armoured vehicles, thinking that they represented a crusade against Godless Bolshevism.” We now know that these Nationalist movements fought the Soviet forces midway through the 1950’s with some battles being of regiment size.

Beevor’s research has turned up new material. Among the most contentious is Japan’s dehumanizing of troops in their militaristic society and revelations of that army’s use of prisoners as food sources. He rightfully points out the Peleliu is the battle in the Pacific that deserves more recognition. It was the worst and unbelievably could have been bypassed. Nimitz’s rare mistake accounted for nearly 10,000 Marine casualties. This is similar to Monty’s decision after the capture of Antwerp not to immediately clear The Scheldt that ended up costing the Canadians 12,873 casualties.

Other intriguing aspects include Italy’s preparations, strategies, and performance being extremely poor. Even the well-trained Italian Alpine Corps, the Alpini, were badly supplied and resorted to making footwear from the tires of Soviet vehicles. Incredibly, 8,000 Allied bomber aircrew died in training accidents equaling roughly one-seventh of their total casualties. During the war years in France, “The average height of boys dropped by seven centimetres and of girls by eleven centimetres” due to food shortages. And the Kursk battle has always focused on tanks but Beevor notes that “the aerial engagements were among the most intense of the whole of the Second World War.” The book is replete with these facts and observations.

The author points out that, “Alliances are complicated enough in victory, but in defeat they are bound to produce the worst recriminations imaginable.” That is because wars produce such amazing personalities, both good and bad. My enjoyment of history has evolved into the study of human behavior in extreme circumstances. For me, that brings history to life and historians who can write with this dimension in mind are to be lauded.

George Marshall never ceases to amaze me with his quiet statesmanship and outstanding organizational skills. Then you have Fredenhall – the incompetent, Kesselring – the Luftwaffe leader who exceled at the defensive ground war, Wingate – the manic-depressive eccentric. There are just so many characters and personalities including Bradley who never impressed me so it was interesting to see the author reveal him as ruthless and ambitious even though he was presented as down-home folksy. It turns out that public relations was very sophisticated and used liberally with Rommel posing for magazine photos, MacArthur making monumental press-worthy pronouncements, Monty taking all the credit for success (he owes the RAF much for the desert victory), and the buffoonish Mark Clark who had a team of 50 public relations professionals burnishing his image in Italy.

Increasingly General Vatutin of the Soviet army is being viewed as one of the war’s more creative commanders (especially in the Soviet forces). He might have been the one entering Berlin had he not succumbed to injuries in 1944 after being ambushed by the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (in 1920 he had fought against the Ukrainian peasant partisans of Nestor Makhno).

Clearly, the war was won on the Eastern Front. The sheer size of the conflict there is confirmed in the losses of soldiers, citizens and materiel (the statistics become mind numbing in scale with half a million dead at Stalingrad alone). For the Soviets to bounce back, it took not only feeding men into meat grinder battles (which they have been appropriately criticized for) but also the ability to put their economy on a war footing and to gain sophistication in intelligence gathering, camouflage, battlefront deceptions, and inter-service coordination. Certainly, the scale of forces and their vast geography ultimately made for the Soviet victory but so did a conscious decision not to be rigid in doctrine.

So after reading my buyer’s remorse dissipated. There are fresh insights and research and the author’s style always engages. However, it is clear that Beevor is overwhelmed. The last quarter seems rushed which takes away from the fact that the conflict was actually escalating towards its end (the German army lost 451,742 dead in January, 1945 alone). As extraordinary as his talents are, it is just too daunting a topic. This amalgam cannot be generalized and given its scale, difficult to distill without losing its complexity.
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1 of 18 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars Terrible picture Dec 10 2012
Format:Kindle Edition
Purchasers should be warned that the book contains a photograph of a multiple execution that is extremely harrowing. The cruelty and the agony is horrible. I cannot get that image out of my mind and I would not have that book in my house.
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