This is the final volume of a comprehensive five part work, including
a multitude of personal accounts of every aspect of the aerial
operations on 'Gold' 'Juno and 'Sword' beaches during D-Day. It relays
the sense of relief experienced as Allied troops gained a foothold on
the continent of Europe after D-Day, both by the men caught up in the
proceedings and the jubilant civilians on the home front. By the end
of June 875,000 men had landed in Normandy; 16 divisions each for the
American and British armies. Although the Allies were well established
on the coast and possessed all the Cotentin Peninsular, the Americans
had still not taken St Lo, nor the British and Canadians the town of
Caen, originally a target for D-Day. German resistance, particularly
around Caen was ferocious, but the end result would be similar to the
Tunisian campaign. More and more well-trained German troops were
thrown into the battle, so that when the Allies did break out of
Normandy, the defenders lost heavily and lacked the men to stop the
Allied forces from almost reaching the borders of Germany. In
continuing style, Bowman pays respect to the men who fought in the
skies above France on D-Day. This episode of Aviation history has
never before been the focus of such detailed analysis; the five
volumes of this series act as a memorial to the individuals who played
their own individual parts in the wider proceedings. Far from being a
mere operational record, this is the story of the men behind the
headlines, the reality behind the iconic images of parachute drops and
glider formations.
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781473829794
Publisert
2014
Utgiver
Independent Publishers Group (Chicago Review Press)
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter