Poland 1939
The Outbreak of World War II
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- USD 12.99
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- USD 12.99
Descripción editorial
A "chilling" and "expertly" written history of the 1939 September Campaign and the onset of World War II (Times of London).
For Americans, World War II began in December of 1941, with the bombing of Pearl Harbor; but for Poland, the war began on September 1, 1939, when Hitler's soldiers invaded, followed later that month by Stalin's Red Army. The conflict that followed saw the debut of many of the features that would come to define the later war-blitzkrieg, the targeting of civilians, ethnic cleansing, and indiscriminate aerial bombing-yet it is routinely overlooked by historians.
In Poland 1939, Roger Moorhouse reexamines the least understood campaign of World War II, using original archival sources to provide a harrowing and very human account of the events that set the bloody tone for the conflict to come.
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Military historian Moorhouse (Berlin at War) revisits the opening campaign of WWII the 1939 invasion of Poland in this dense and exhaustive account. Contending that the Poles have long been rendered "nameless, voiceless victims, bit-part players in their own narrative," Moorhouse uses diaries, memoirs, and archival documents to correct the historical record. Caught between Hitler's determination to annex historically German regions lost under the Treaty of Versailles that brought an end to WWI and Stalin's desire to seize territory guaranteed in the "secret protocol" of the German-Soviet nonaggression pact, Poland was doomed to be the first domino to fall, despite the valor of its armed forces. Moorhouse documents the implications of France and England's refusal to send military aid (an estimated 200,000 Polish civilians and soldiers died in the two-front invasion) and describes how Germany's blitzkrieg tactics, as well as its extensive bombing of towns and cities and refusal to distinguish combatants from noncombatants, foreshadowed the brutal nature of the war and the transformation of Poland into "a Nazi dystopia in which populations were expropriated, deported, or murdered on a whim." Moorhouse successfully fills in the gaps of an episode that receives cursory treatment in most WWII narratives, but armchair historians may be overwhelmed by the level of detail. This granular account is for completists only.