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Stalingrad: The Fateful Siege: 1942-1943 |  | Author: Antony Beevor Publisher: Penguin (Non-Classics) Category: Book
List Price: $18.00 Buy Used: $4.68 as of 3/18/2010 06:05 MDT details You Save: $13.32 (74%)
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Seller: textbookbookie Rating: 255 reviews Sales Rank: 11509
Media: Paperback Edition: First Printing, cover Torn Pages: 560 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 8.2 x 5.5 x 1.2
ISBN: 0140284583 Dewey Decimal Number: 940.5421785 EAN: 9780140284584 ASIN: 0140284583
Publication Date: May 1, 1999 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Amazon.com Review Hitler made two fundamental and crippling mistakes during the Second World War: The first was his whimsical belief that the United Kingdom would eventually become his ally, which delayed his decision to launch a major invasion of Britain, whose army was unprepared for the force of blitzkrieg warfare. The second was the ill-conceived Operation Barbarossa--an invasion of Russia that was supposed to take the German army to the gates of Moscow. Antony Beevor's thoughtfully researched compendium recalls this epic struggle for Stalingrad. No one, least of all the Germans, could foretell the deep well of Soviet resolve that would become the foundation of the Red Army; Russia, the Germans believed, would fall as swiftly as France and Poland. The ill-prepared Nazi forces were trapped in a bloody war of attrition against the Russian behemoth, which held them in the pit of Stalingrad for nearly two years. Beevor points out that the Russians were by no means ready for the war either, making their stand even more remarkable; Soviet intelligence spent as much time spying on its own forces--in fear of desertion, treachery, and incompetence--as they did on the Nazis. Due attention is also given to the points of view of the soldiers and generals of both forces, from the sickening battles to life in the gulags. Many believe Stalingrad to be the turning point of the war. The Nazi war machine proved to be fallible as it spread itself too thin for a cause that was born more from arrogance than practicality. The Germans never recovered, and its weakened defenses were no match for the Allied invasion of 1944. We know little of what took place in Stalingrad or its overall significance, leading Beevor to humbly admit that "[t]he Battle of Stalingrad remains such an ideologically charged and symbolically important subject that the last word will not be heard for many years." This is true. But this gripping account should become the standard work against which all others should measure themselves. --Jeremy Storey
Product Description This gripping history is the definitive account of the battle that shifted the tide of World War II. Historians and reviewers worldwide have hailed Antony Beevor's magisterial Stalingrad as the definitive account of World War II's most harrowing battle. In August 1942, Hitler's huge Sixth Army reached the city that bore Stalin's name. In the five month siege that followed, the Russians fought to hold Stalingrad at any cost, then caught their Nazi enemy in an astonishing reversal. As never before, Stalingrad conveys the experience of soldiers on both sides as they fought in inhuman conditions, and of civilians trapped on an urban battlefield. Antony Beevor has interviewed survivors and discovered completely new material in a wide range of German and Soviet archives, including reports of prisoner interrogations, desertions, and executions. The battle of Stalingrad was the psychological turning point of World War II; as Beevor makes clear, it also changed the face of modern warfare. As a story of cruelty, courage, and human suffering, Stalingrad is unprecedented and unforgettable. "A fantastic and sobering story . . . fully and authoritatively told." -Richard Bernstein, The New York Times
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 255
Superbly Done February 15, 2010 K.A.Goldberg (Chicago) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Historian Anthony Beevor recreates this horrid life-and-death struggle in gripping, readable detail. The author begins by briefly examining the German invasion of Soviet Russia (Barbarossa) in June, 1941. Readers see the murderous brutalities of the Nazi invaders, the defenders' scorched-earth retreat, partisan activities, and the also-disgusting brutalities of Stalin and his secret police/NKVD apparatus. As many know, the German Wehrmacht lost much advantage in its retreat from Moscow in December 1941, but still held the initiative the following summer. At this point Hitler made the fatal decision to split his southern armies between Stalingrad and the Caucauses, and Stalingrad was soon to become a test of wills between the two dictators. The author shows how the German Sixth and Fourth Panzer Armies entered Stalingrad sensing easy victory, but soon found tenacious defenders fighting desperately from the city's ruins. Readers are made to feel as if we are there amongst the bombed-out factories only yards from the Volga River, enduring air raids, shells, snipers, tanks, and other daily horrors. We also get a bird's-eye view of the private war councils of Paulus, Von Manstein, Chuikov, Zhukov, and other top commanders. Then, as the weather turns colder that fall, readers feel the bitter winds, frostbite, ration shortages, frozen corpses, and increasing German desperation once the Red Army surrounded the attackers and Hitler refused requests to retreat. Finally, nearly 100,000 starving Germans surrendered to the Red Army at the end of January (few would survive captivity). In short, an ugly and brutal battle in a brutal, ugly war.
Anthony Beevor is a British historian who makes excellent use of official documents, first-person interviews, letters and diary entries from the soldiers (many of whom didn't survive). He also is one of the few historians who writes with easy-reading prose. The result is a gripping look at a brutal battle that was one of the major turning points of the war.
A classic February 6, 2010 Kirk H Sowell (Washington D.C.) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Anthony Beevor's "Stalingrad: The Fateful Siege" is one of those books you just have read, even as much of it is unpleasant. Indeed, because much of it is unpleasant. What this book does is bring to you the reality of war as much as any book can. Beevor's narrative methodology alternates between three threads: the Sixth Army at Stalingrad itself, the Soviet side, and the German military and political leadership on the Eastern front and in Germany proper. Among these three narratives, the primary focus is on German soldiers, of all ranks, within the Sixth Army. Beevor's bias is not anti-Russian, as he makes clear that the real culpability for this massive panorama of human suffering lies with Hitler, Goebbels and the German senior military staff. He also includes enough traditional war history material about the large-scale movement of armies and units to make the broader strategic context clear. But that is not what makes this book what it is.
Blaming Hitler and the Nazis is easy; the more difficult question is who among the German general staff was in a position to turn against Hitler before it was too late. Beevor points to General Erich von Manstein, the Eastern front commander to whom the much-maligned General Friedrich von Paulus, head of the doomed Sixth Army, reported. Like many German officers who were not Nazi Party members, Manstein disliked Hitler, talked him down among close colleagues and even trained his dog to do the Nazi salute as a joke. According to Beevor, Manstein more than any other both had the knowledge of what was happening inside the Kessel and - perhaps - the ability to lead an anti-Nazi coup within the Wehrmacht. But he didn't.
Beevor portrays Paulus himself as more of a tragic figure. Emotionally and morally broken by the time of his capture, Paulus seems at once both dutiful and weak. He might have broken out had he disobeyed orders, but by mid-December 1942 it was too late. He seems almost a pathetic person to be leading an armed force in one of history's most significant events.
The valor of ordinary German soldiers shines through, and is impossible to ignore despite the heinous nature of their country's political leadership. Beevor gives many examples of this, noting, for instance, that of the 600 doctors assigned to the Sixth Army, none capable of working flew out. Nor do any German officers appear to have tried to their rank to get out, despite there being almost daily airlifts almost until the end. What can be said in Paulus' favor is that he made no attempt to save himself.
Although Beevor makes use of Russian sources, the source material is definitely German-dominated here. He does not ignore the Russian side, but my estimation - without doing a precise page count - is that a bit more than half the material is focused on the Sixth Army and other German units directly involved, about a third focuses on the Red Army and the Soviet government, with the remainder taken up in discussion of the German senior staff and events back in Germany.
Not the Best Available January 22, 2010 Thomas G. Benson 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
If you want to read the absolute best history of the battle for Stalingrad read Roger Craig's
Enemy at the gates, by far a much much better read.
Lacks Human Connection December 31, 2009 Teacher with an MBA (Michigan) 1 out of 3 found this review helpful
Although I found the details about the seige and the war to be very thorough and interesting, I could not connect to any of the characters in the war. Maybe I'm used to the intimacy of books like Gods and Generals, but I felt Beevor did not make me feel the human suffering on a personal level, but only on a general broad level. There were a lot of quotes from individual soldiers, politicians, and officers, but no consistency throughout to connect me to any single person, especially the foot soldier that experienced the Hell of Stalingrad. Strong on depicting the Hell, but not making it intimate for the reader to experience it through the eyes of those who were there.
Military History RAW and Refined December 22, 2009 Michael E. Whatley (altadena, ca) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Most combat veterans will tell you that artillery barrages are among the most terrifying actions they ever survived in War. The term "gut-wrenching" captures the essence of being under such a seige of exploding metal and fire.
Beevor brings intellectual force, historical accuracy and riveting realism to almost endless "gut-wrenching" actions in the Stalingrad of 1942/42. "Not one step backward" Stalin decreed. Can you imagine a leader in the 21st century uttering such words?
I blew up maps on a copier and had them near so I could see the location of units. Wish I could have viewed real time Google Earth from 1942/43.
No matter, Stalingrad ranks next to Bernard Fall's "Hell in a Very Small Place" to me. Both books will sear the serious reader.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 255
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