Best of
World-War-Ii
1952
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.
Hitler: A Study in Tyranny
Alan Bullock - 1952
Here in an abridged edition.
The White Rabbit: The Secret Agent the Gestapo Could Not Crack
Bruce Marshall - 1952
Yeo-Thomas, aka “The White Rabbit,” parachuted into France to aid the Resistance; two years later the Gestapo seized him and unleashed all their power to make him give up information… Chilling and unforgettable.
Holding the Stirrup
Elisabeth von Guttenberg - 1952
Her life was one of peace and happiness in which she and her husband served faithfully their people. When World War I comes, her quiet world is shattered and, following the Treaty of Versailles, nothing is the same for her or for her beloved country as economic and political upheavals threaten and destroy the customs of ages.
The Colditz Story
P.R. Reid - 1952
It was to this impregnable fortress that the Germans sent all those prisoners who persisted in escaping from other camps, such as Stalag Luft III (of THE GREAT ESCAPE FAME). Once within the walls of Colditz, the Germans reasoned, escape was impossible. And yet during the four-year period when the castle was used as a prison over 300 men escaped, 31 of whom managed to complete the hazardous journey home through Germany. Prisoners from 10 different countries formed a truly international escape academy. Skeleton keys were made, German passes forged, maps drafted, and all manner of tools and machinery constructed out of whatever the prisoners had to hand. The ingenuity of the escape artists knew no bounds: they tried everything from tunnelling, to hiding in rubbish sacks, disguising themselves as German officers, and leaping acrobatically from the castle walls.
Back Door to War, The Roosevelt Foreign Policy, 1933 - 1941
Charles Callan Tansill - 1952
Study of how FDR helped cause WWII.
The Death оf Hitler's Germany. The Full Terryfing Story of a Gangster's Empire Last Days
Georges Blond - 1952