Basket
Your Basket is Empty
Currency:
Free Delivery
SecurityMetrics for PCI Compliance, QSA, IDS, Penetration Testing, Forensics, and Vulnerability Assessment
Get Live Help
We guarantee same or next day shipping, friendly and courteous phone and email support, A full No Quibble 100% Money Back Guarantee. Tel: 01527 888 440 or 0800 612 2312 (UK Freephone Number)
Safebuy

The Retreat: Hitler's First Defeat:

The Retreat: Hitler's First Defeat by Michael Jones, GB9780719569524 ISBN 10: 0719569524
*****
Bookmark and Share

The Retreat: Hitler's First Defeat

by Michael Jones

£14.00
RRP: £20.00 | You Save: £6.00
In Stock | Delivery: Standard 3-4 Days, £2.65
Format: Hardback Add to Basket
Publisher: JOHN MURRAY GENERAL PUBLISHING DIVISION
ISBN-13:

9780719569524

ISBN-10:

0719569524

Description:

At the moment of crisis in 1941 on the Eastern front, with the forces of Hitler massing on the outskirts of Moscow, the miraculous occurred: Moscow was saved. Yet this turning point was followed by a long retreat, in which Russian forces, inspired by old beliefs in the sacred motherland, pushed back German forces steeled by the vision of the ubermensch, the iron-willed fighter. Many of Russia's 27 million military and civilian deaths occurred in this desperate struggle.

In THE RETREAT, Michael Jones, acclaimed author of LENINGRAD, draws upon a mass of new eye-witness testimony from both sides of the conflict to tell, with matchless vividness and comprehensiveness, of the crucial turning point of the Second World War - the moment when the armies of Hitler could go no further - and of the titanic and cruel struggle of two mighty empires.

Review this Book

Please write your review below and submit it for consideration:

Note that reviews containing html or website addresses will not be accepted.

:
:
:
Submit Review Cancel

Book Reviews:

*****

BBC History Magazine

02/09/2010

Evan Mawdsley looks at a striking picture of a Second World War defeat


The ’retreat‘, it needs to be explained, is the retreat of the German army from in front of Moscow, between mid-December 1941 and February 1942. But, as a bonus, Michael Jones tells a larger story: the whole of the Moscow campaign, effectively from the start of October 1941.

As a fresh popular account of the whole battle, this volume has much value. Rodric Braithwaite‘s Moscow 1941 (2006) pays limited attention to the military side, and The Retreat is better than The Greatest Battle (2007) ” another enigmatically titled book about Moscow, by the Newsweek editor Andrew Nagorski.

Dr Jones for the most part lays out the strategic decisions accurately and intelligibly. But too much blame is assigned to Hitler, rather than to his senior generals like Brauchitsch, Halder and Bock; Moscow was their defeat.

By November 1941 the führer was more interested in the Caucasus, and he hoped to smother Moscow with an encirclement. It is also not clear why so much space is devoted to the destruction of General Vlasov‘s Second Shock Army or the siege of Demiansk. These were striking episodes, but Vlasov‘s defeat was part of the Leningrad campaign, and Demiansk is halfway between Moscow and Leningrad. And the final page of the book is troubling. It was not in the spring of 1942, after the Moscow retreat, that Hitler began “a race war of subjugation”; “total war” was part of the German army‘s original Barbarossa concept, and it was put fully into practice in the summer and autumn of 1941.

The strength of this work, however, is the view from the trenches, and here will be its attraction to readers. The book consists of eyewitness testimonies by front-line officers and soldiers, constructed into a gripping narrative. Many of the published accounts will be new to English-speaking readers, and Dr Jones has also carried out an impressive number of interviews with elderly veterans in Germany and Russia.

Occasionally a good story is retailed uncritically: the report that German soldiers drove into battle with a gramophone playing on top of their vehicle (anticipating Colonel Kilgore‘s Aircav in Apocalypse Now) suggests some ignorance of both gramophones and Russian roads. But there are more than enough authentic episodes. The battle of Moscow was a hell on earth, a terrible, bloody event for both invaders and defenders. A mass of first-person material has been cleverly assembled here to paint a striking picture.

Evan Mawdsley is professor of history, University of Glasgow, and author of World War II (Cambridge University Press, 2009)

Related Books