From the "Library Journal"Hitler and his general staff were
convinced that if the Allies on the Continent were struck a
shattering blow, their unity would collapse. In mid-December 1944,
they planned and executed a sudden but unsuccessful counterattack
westward through the Forest of Ardennes that on combat maps
produced a change in the battle line forever known as the Bulge.
Following the format and scope of their earlier works "The Way It
Was" (LJ 8/91) and "D-Day Normandy"(LJ 4/1/94), the authors have
reconstructed the sense of those uncertain days in the frozen
Belgian woods. Hundreds of photos taken from American and German
sources capture the world of combat from the perspective of foot
soldiers and tank crewmen in all its powerful, gritty, and often
gruesome reality. A valuable addition to any collection on this
subject.
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