Selected Product: | Eighth Air Force: The American Bomber Crews in Britain Paperback Author: Donald Miller Publisher: Aurum Press Ltd Release Date: April 2008 ISBN-10: 1845133366 ISBN-13: 9781845133368 List Price: £9.99 Average Customer Rating: | | |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Eighth Air Force: The American Bomber Crews in Britain by Donald Miller (ISBN-10: 1845133366, ISBN-13: 9781845133368). At this time we have not yet written a review for Eighth Air Force: The American Bomber Crews in Britain by Donald Miller (ISBN-10: 1845133366, ISBN-13: 9781845133368). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Almost perfect! | Customer Rating: | | This is a fine book which I really enjoyed reading and which added greatly to my understanding of the European air war. However, there are a couple of surprisingly basic mistakes. The Battle Of Britain was in 1940, not 1941 and the Germans surrendered to Montgomery on 4 May, not Eisenhower on 7 May. What the author is referring to was an artificial show which was created and stage-managed for Eisenhower, the Russians and the media. The surrender had already taken place. | Comprehensive, sympathetic but not uncritical account | Customer Rating: | This account of the American 8th Air Force daylight raids tackles all three of the major issues: the strategic background that provides the context; the individual histories that illuminate the detail of the strategy; and a review, in passing, of the ethical issues involved.
As might be expected by a historian of Miller's calibre (his works have been nominated for every major American literary award) the work is balanced; the background research comprehensive and the narrative well-crafted. This is likely to be the definitive work on the subject for some years, since the book is so comprehensive and benefits from astute comment brought about by the author's familiarity with the breadth of the source material. | Almost perfect... | Customer Rating: | | I already read a great deal of interesting books on this subjet, so when I purchased this title, my initial thoughts were that I wondered whether this pretty voluminous work would succeed in keeping me hooked on its contents. It pretty well did! The obvious strength lies in the wide angle which Donald Miller has used when dealing with this subject. Apart from the "Bomber Boys" and their Heavies, he spent quite a bit of attention to other - often not so popular and therefore less known - elements, all of which offers the reader a beautiful, near complete and detailed picture of what this mighty group of soldiers' stay in England meant and how it left a permanent mark on local life. The "small stories" (petite histoire in French) offer a welcome change to the vividly described operational accounts. Great contribution too about those brave people in occupied Europe, who assisted shot down airmen with getting them back to their base, and the chapters about the crews in the Stalags and DuLags are both moving and breathtaking. As such this book is most recommended reading for all interested in the Mighty Eighth and airwar in general. The reason I deducted the one star is that I can not quite understand why one of the most interesting, recent and major contributions of the airwar written by Jörg Friedrich, is missing from immense list of pubications and books the author has relied on to write this massive work. |
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