Review
"A sobering account not often presented to students of the European theater." --
Reviewer's Bookwatch"Immensely entertaining narrative leaving the reader wanting to learn more about the 'frontier battles' in Europe." --
The Star BannerDeath On A Distant Frontier acknowledges the dearth of creativity in the Allied leadership under Eisenhower after the Normandy landing which allowed the Germans to regroup. But its primary focus is on the incredibloe bravery and savrifice of soldiers who spent the winter of '44-45 in a foreign country grapping with the Wehrmacht in desperate battles that could only gradually mean the demise of Nazi Germany. Through hard fighting, the young men of America eventually prevailed. But the stark, cold fact is that when Hitler committed suicide, it was Russian soldiers dancing on his grave, while thousands of U. S. troops found their final resting place in the ruins of Aachen, Metz, the Reichswald and the Huertgen Forest. Death On A Distant Frontier is a sobering account not often presented to students of the European theatre. --
Midwest Book Review
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
About the Author
Charles Whiting served with a reconnaisance outfit in WWII and has since become one of the premier historians of the war. Among his many best-selling works are Patton, The Last Assault, and Death on a Distant Frontier. He currently lives in York, England.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.