dwesolick
Posts: 593
Joined: 6/24/2002 From: Colorado Status: offline
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If you are interested in books that "read" very well, you can't do a lot better than Antony Beevor's "Stalingrad" or "Berlin". Both are superb and hard to put down. I have most of Glantz's books, and they are excellent overall, but not very easy reading most of the time. I'm about halfway through "Absolute War" by Bellamy and it is a good read as well. The only drawbacks are that it is from the Russian perspective (it is subtitled: Soviet Russia in the Second World War, in fairness ), and that it takes a fairly pro-Soviet line (Lenin was a "great man", Stalin "deserves a break", Beria has been overly criticized by historians, etc...). He does mention some of the crimes of the regime, but he is too quick to offer excuses and explain other things away...the NKVD often comes across in a positive light. For my two cents, there's not a bit of difference (morally) between Hitler and Stalin's regimes. Oh, if you are interested in a great video series, check out "Battlefield: Russia, the Eastern Front". It's a 3 DVD set which covers Barbarossa, Stalingrad, and Berlin and is absolutely masterful military history...the documentary footage actually fits the particular battles they are discussing and isn't just a hodgepodge of generic WWII clippings spliced together as you so often see in most recent documentaries. The Barbarossa DVD has two parts: the first covers the background, leaders (political and military), weapons, plans, armies, air forces, etc and the second part covers the campaign from 22 June 41 through the battles around Moscow. Superbly done. Haven't watched the other two yet. Oh, and I think I paid around $20 or so for it at Amazon! Also, you might be interested in a DVD set called "Russia's War: Blood upon the snow", which is also outstanding, but more of a history of the Stalin years with an emphasis on the Russo-German War.
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"The Navy has a moth-eaten tradition that the captain who loses his ship is disgraced. What do they have all those ships for, if not to hurl them at the enemy?" --Douglas MacArthur
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