Twilight of the Gods: The decline and fall of the German General Staff in World War II
Autor David Stoneen Limba Engleză Hardback – 30 oct 2011
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781844861361
ISBN-10: 1844861368
Pagini: 440
Ilustrații: 50 illustrations, 10 maps
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 40 mm
Greutate: 0.89 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Conway
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1844861368
Pagini: 440
Ilustrații: 50 illustrations, 10 maps
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 40 mm
Greutate: 0.89 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Conway
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Places the story in its proper historical context, dispelling some of the myths that still surround this particular organization and its contribution to German militarism and the Third Reich, while also providing an explanation of the active part played by many of its members in the German resistance movement against Hitler.
Notă biografică
David Stone is a former British army infantry officer. Much of his service was in Germany, both with and alongside soldiers of the Bundeswehr in peacetime and on operations. He became a military historian in 2002, and is the author of the authoritative works Hitler's Army: The Men, Machines and Organisation, 1939-1945 (2009) and Fighting for the Fatherland: The Story of the German Soldier from 1648 to the Present Day (2006). Richard Holmes described the latter as the most comprehensive and accessible account of the German soldier ever published in English. His other titles include the acclaimed First Reich (2002), Battles in Focus: Dien Bien Phu (2004), Wars of the Cold War (2004) and War Summits (2005). He also wrote Cold War Warriors (1998) and was a consultant and co-author of World War II Chronicle (2007).
Recenzii
Twilight of the Gods represents an important contribution to the study of the Second World War. Stone provides the best overall account of the German General Staff since Walter Görlitz s classic study of the early 1950s. It is therefore both timely and recommended.
This is a masterly account of the turbulent relationship between, on the one hand, a superbly-trained General Staff inbued with Prussian tenets of effectiveness and honour, and, on the other, a cold-blooded entirely pragmatic political regime led by Hitler and Himmler, careless of honour and fatally ambitious...Strongly recommended
This is both a clever book and a compelling one. It is clever in the way that David Stone winds many different perspectives on the German General Staff around the central theme of its eventual and inevitable demise in the last disastrous days of the Third Reich. It is compelling in that the narrative and the analysis are blended together in a way that demands that the book is not easily put down until the last page has been turned. Even the casual student of military history will be aware of the reputation of the great German General Staff, and therefore the tragedy of its professional disintegration in the face of increasingly manic political control provokes an intense fascination. In tracing both the rise and fall of the German General Staff, David Stone gives credit where it is due and points criticism where appropriate, but achieves both, sometimes through the eyes of individual members and at others as a critique of the whole staff system. It may be simplistic to record that the defining chapter of this historic account flows from the events of the failed assassination attempt on Adolf Hitler on 20th July 1944. The attention to detail and clarity of thinking that defined the German General Staff collapsed in tatters, in confusion and indecisiveness during the hours that followed the failed bombing. David Stone describes not only how reputations were shattered but also how retribution was swift the great General Staff had finally lost its influence and the tragic fate of Germany was sealed. Never has a politician so misunderstood the military excellence that he had at his disposal. Had Adolf Hitler achieved a different relationship with his military professionals then the course of world history might have been very different. David Stone leaves that agonizing perhaps, awful thought as a possibility on which the reader is left to ponder.
This is a masterly account of the turbulent relationship between, on the one hand, a superbly-trained General Staff inbued with Prussian tenets of effectiveness and honour, and, on the other, a cold-blooded entirely pragmatic political regime led by Hitler and Himmler, careless of honour and fatally ambitious...Strongly recommended
This is both a clever book and a compelling one. It is clever in the way that David Stone winds many different perspectives on the German General Staff around the central theme of its eventual and inevitable demise in the last disastrous days of the Third Reich. It is compelling in that the narrative and the analysis are blended together in a way that demands that the book is not easily put down until the last page has been turned. Even the casual student of military history will be aware of the reputation of the great German General Staff, and therefore the tragedy of its professional disintegration in the face of increasingly manic political control provokes an intense fascination. In tracing both the rise and fall of the German General Staff, David Stone gives credit where it is due and points criticism where appropriate, but achieves both, sometimes through the eyes of individual members and at others as a critique of the whole staff system. It may be simplistic to record that the defining chapter of this historic account flows from the events of the failed assassination attempt on Adolf Hitler on 20th July 1944. The attention to detail and clarity of thinking that defined the German General Staff collapsed in tatters, in confusion and indecisiveness during the hours that followed the failed bombing. David Stone describes not only how reputations were shattered but also how retribution was swift the great General Staff had finally lost its influence and the tragic fate of Germany was sealed. Never has a politician so misunderstood the military excellence that he had at his disposal. Had Adolf Hitler achieved a different relationship with his military professionals then the course of world history might have been very different. David Stone leaves that agonizing perhaps, awful thought as a possibility on which the reader is left to ponder.