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Paperback War Without Hate: The Desert Campaign of 1940-1943 Book

ISBN: 0142003948

ISBN13: 9780142003947

War Without Hate: The Desert Campaign of 1940-1943

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Book Overview

From the climactic battle of Alamein, where Allied forces handed the Nazis their first major defeat, to the remarkable story of L?szl? Almasy, who became the basis for the romantic English patient in... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

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Precisely detailed and imminently readable; the authors do an excellent job of injecting personal and fascinating stories into what might otherwise be a droll recitation of tactics in the desert. A fine read.

Read all the rest? Now read the ....

Well, maybe not THE BEST but a damn fine read. I've been reading about the Desert War since 1962 when i bought Donald Crisp's classic "Brazen Chariots" so if i like this book its worth reading. Even the maps are OK, better certainly than most "real" histories. The chosen anecdotes and award citations all move the action in a comphrensible account. They even have the possible origin of the Monty Python Classic: "I'm not dead yet!" --"Turner had been touring his perimeter, helping a short-handed gun crew or tending the wounded when he could, exhorting when he could not. Bird sometimes wished he could find a happier choice of words. 'Come on, you're not dead yet,' he growled at the shaken occupants of a slit-trench who had been almost buried alive by a near-miss." pp. 304-305. And the title seems to come from Rommel's prospective but never written book on the war: War without Hate. pete saussy

Excellent history of the Desert War

I have a vague recollection of a book published in Germany shortly after the war entitled War Without Hate whose subject matter was Rommel in the desert (and I seem to recall that it was a collection of Rommel's writings regarding the Desert War). This is not that book but that book may well have been the source of the title. While the Desert War was certainly less ugly than the generally contemporaneous struggles going on in Russia and in the Pacific, it certainly was not free from pain, fear and death. The final surrender of Axis forces in Tunisia resulted in more prisoners than the surrender of Axis forces in Stalingrad some four months before. The Germans used S mines designed when step on to spring up to roughly crotch height before exploding. When a British plan to attack Axis rear areas using troops disguised in German uniforms guided by anti-Nazi Germans failed because some allegedly anti-Nazi Germans betrayed the British to the Germans, the remaining allegedly anti-Nazi Germans were summarily executed. Flamethrowers were used to burn soldiers out of fortifications and many burned to death when their tanks "brewed up". Yet there was an extraordinary mutual respect between the Germans and the British (that included a mutual disrespect of the Italians). They shared even their taste in music. Lili Marlene became the unofficial theme song for each side. One wonders why this was possible in the desert while unrelenting hatred raged elsewhere. Perhaps the answer can be found in the circumstances of the desert itself. There were few civilians in the combat areas so resentments arising from civilian deaths were relatively rare. (But there were few civilians on the Pacific islands either yet war there raged as savagely as anywhere at any time.) Neither side considered the desert to be their homeland. Both sides constantly fought the same enemy, the desert itself. This book is a well-written history of the entire Desert War primarily from a British perspective. It is full of personal anecdotes of the war. We learn the true story of the hero (or anti-hero) of The English Patient. (Sorry, girls. He preferred the affections of men.) We are introduced to the mystery of the professional magician turned soldier who created the illusion that the port of Alexandria was elsewhere causing the German bombs to fall harmlessly into the sea. We learn of the deserter who won the Victoria Cross. We ride with Rommel as he inflicts the defeat upon the American Army at Kasserine Pass that he hopes will traumatize the green Americans into a permanent inferiority complex. Rommel captured so many American tanks and other equipment that, ironically, it was he himself whose morale suffered. When he saw the quantity and quality of American equipment, all of which had been transported directly from America to the beaches of North Africa, he could see the handwriting on the wall as regards the respective production capacities of America and German

Excellent Overview of the African Campaign

This is one of the best military history books I have ever read. It provides good, detailed information about the battles, weapons, leaders, and espionage missions and personages of the African campaign without being too overburdening. Plus, the maps are some of the best maps I have ever seen in a work of military history. Kudos to John Bierman and Colin Smith.
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