Spitfire
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 5,078
- Location
- Copenhagen, Denmark.
Piece of cake...you should see me fly under Tower Bridge and the Eifel Tower! (Microsoft Combat Flight Simulator/WWII Europe)
Cobden said:Can I recommend Alistair MacLean's "HMS Ulysses". A fantastic book, very moving, I can't recommend it enough.
LizzieMaine said:Historywise, I liked "The Murrow Boys" by Stanley Cloud and Lynne Olson, the story of Edward R. Murrow and his team of CBS radio correspondents, and how they covered the war. While I disagreed with certain aspects of the premise -- they downplay the accomplishments of other networks' correspondents a bit too much -- I do think that the picture they paint of Murrow and his team is fascinating.
A good overall history is "There's A War To Be Won!" by Geoffrey Perret. A very hefty volume, but good reading thruout. Perret also wrote an excellent biography of Gen. Eisenhower, which is worth checking out too.
Probably the best and most accessible history of the era I've ever read -- not just WW2/the 40s but the whole period from 1932 to 1972 -- is "The Glory and the Dream," by William Manchester. It's a two-volume work published in 1973, and rather than just dully reciting facts, it puts the whole history of the era into a breezy narrative form. Manchester's political point of view sometimes is a bit too prominent for my taste, but the readability and depth of the book more than compensate for that. A must-read for anyone interested in what life in the Era was really like.
You might want to read Richard Tregaskis;Guadalcanal DiaryParallel Guy said:For a truly personal look at the war, I don't think anything beats Ernie Pyle. He even includes the towns and sometimes addresses of those he talks to... and he talks to every type of soldier you can think of. I just finished Brave Men and came away with a new depth of repsect for those soldiers.
Side note: I talked to my stepfather who was in the Pacific during WWII. He said he played craps with Mr. Pyle and the man was every bit as down to earth as his books make him seem.