Best of
Military-History

1952

The Army of the Potomac, 3 Vols


Bruce Catton - 1952
    Lincoln's Army/Glory Road/A Stillness at Appomattox

One of Our Submarines (Pen & Sword Military Classics)


Edward Young - 1952
    Submarines are thrilling beasts, and Edward Young tells of four years' adventures in them in a good stout book with excitement on every page. He writes beautifully, economically and with humour, and in the actions he commands he manages to put the reader at the voice-pipe and the periscope so that sometimes the tension is so great that one has to put the book down'. The Sunday Times.

I Flew for the Führer


Heinz Knoke - 1952
    He joined the Luftwaffe at the outbreak of the war, rose to the rank of commanding officer, and received the Knight’s Cross. Knoke’s account crackles with vivid accounts of air battles; and captures his utter desolation at Germany’s defeat.

The Struggle for Europe


Chester Wilmot - 1952
    The pattern of post-war Europe, he maintains, was determined during the fighting; he sees the shaping of events through a study of wartime diplomacy and strategy and the impact on wartime policies of the personalities of the statesmen and generals with whom the decisions lay.

Lincoln and His Generals


T. Harry Williams - 1952
    Evaluates Lincoln's ability as a director of war and his influence on the development of a modern command system.From the Trade Paperback edition.

The War of the Revolution, Vol 2


Christopher Ward - 1952
    Excellent history based on the author's The Delaware Continentals, 1776-1783.

The War of the Revolutiom - Volume I


Christopher Ward - 1952
    

Back Door to War, The Roosevelt Foreign Policy, 1933 - 1941


Charles Callan Tansill - 1952
    Study of how FDR helped cause WWII.

History of the German General Staff 1657-1945


Walter Görlitz - 1952
    During the first decades of its existence, the Staff was led by idealists with constructive political conceptions. The emergence later of anonymous technicians, whose political convictions were either nonexistent or based on ambition, only aggravated a militaristic national temperament. Hitler's hostility caused many Staff members to be torn between their ethical responsibilities & the traditional military obedience dictated by their oath of office. In the end, Hitler succeeded in destroying the German General Staff, perhaps because it had become composed of so many different political and intellectual strains. Based on research & interviews with military staff who survived WWII.