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Books : Endgame, 1945: The Missing Final Chapter of World War II 

List Price:$26.99
Our Price: $17.81
You Save: $9.18 (34%)
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Binding: Hardcover
Dewey Decimal Number: 940.5421
EAN: 9780316109802
ISBN: 0316109800
Label: Little, Brown and Company
Manufacturer: Little, Brown and Company
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 608
Publication Date: November 12, 2007
Publisher: Little, Brown and Company
Sales Rank: 22376
Studio: Little, Brown and Company




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Editorial Review:

Product Description:
To end a history of World War II at VE Day is to leave the tale half told. While the war may have seemed all but over by Hitler's final birthday (April 20), Stafford's chronicle of the three months that followed tells a different, and much richer, story.


ENDGAME 1945 highlights the gripping personal stories of nine men and women, ranging from soldiers to POWs to war correspondents, who witnessed firsthand the Allied struggle to finish the terrible game at last.Through their ground-level movements, Stafford traces the elaborate web of events that led to the war's real resolution: the deaths of Hitler and Mussolini, the liberation of Buchenwald and Dachau, and the Allies' race with the Red Army to establish a victors' foothold in Europe, to name a few.From Hitler's April decision never to surrender to the start of the Potsdam Conference, Stafford brings an unprecedented focus to the war's 'final chapter.'


Narrative history at its most compelling, ENDGAME 1945 is the riveting story of three turbulent months that truly shaped the modern world.



Customer Reviews
Average Rating: out of 5 stars

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Depends what you're looking for
If you're looking for a miltary-centric exposition of the last days of world war 2 in europe, you'll be disappointed with this. There is no discussion of which force did what, when and why. There are no maps with thrusts and front lines, offensives and retreats, battles.

What it is is a chronicle of aftermath. The aftermath of conquest and defeat, death camps and the implosion of two countries (Italy and Germany) from within the massive conflagration they initiated. Carrying the narrative ... Read More



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Descriptive end of the Nazi regime...
I've found many similarities between this book and Antony Beevor'shaunting tome "The Fall of Berlin 1945".Although "Endgame 1945" ups the ante and surpasses Beevor with its far richer character development.I've found it to be profoundly moving and an accurate witness to the unimaginable horrors created in the death throes of the Third Reich.



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Endgame, 1945: David Stafford brutal portrait of a Europe in hell during the last days of World War II
In the beginning of this outstanding account of the last days of World War II there is a gripping quotation from General William Tecumseh Sherman:
"I am sick and tired of war. It's glory is all moonshine...War is Hell."
If you still doubt that lesson then you should read this book. Stafford focuses on nine individuals, their stories and how their personal biographies were intertwined with larger events as the war in Europe drew to an end in the spring of 1945.
We see Robert Ellis an ... Read More



Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - Still missing
I am clearly going against the grain of other reviewers.Stylistically, this book reads like a true-crime story. While the individual stories are for the most part very interesting, they don't begin to write the final chapter on the war in Europe.The last 25 pages of Herbert A. Werner's "Iron Coffins" do a better job of conveying the scope and scale of immediate post-war Europe.I finished the book still looking for a lot more.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Small stories from a big war
Most educated Americans know, in general, what happened on the battlefields of WWII from Normandy to V-E Day. This extremely excellent book, while giving a broad overview of thr "big" events, tells us a multitude of "little" stories about different people caught up in living during the last months of the war. They are fascinating tales, and even more so for being true. We go along the roads of Germany with troops, see the opening of the concentration camps, spend time imprisoned, and in general wait out the ... Read More



Endgame, 1945: The Missing Final Chapter of World War II

 
 
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