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This book recounts the World War II journeys of a soldier, a ship,
and a bottle of spirits through, and around, five great
turning-point battles. Those battles were influenced more by
geography and climate than by generals and admirals. Properly
titled they would be known as the Battles of the Sky (Britain), the
Sand (El Alemein), the Snow (Stalingrad), the Sea (North Atlantic),
and the Shore (Normandy). Slogging their way through this quintet
are an eighteen-year-old G.I. from Missouri (as seen through his
letters home), an "ugly duckling" of a Liberty ship (as seen
through its Armed Guard reports), and a bottle of rum (as traced by
those who, after the war, made money in selling war souvenirs). It
is the history of the North Atlantic sea basin and its extensions
at war: the story of the lulls between battles, when America's
teenage warriors often watched war movies (Humphrey Bogart made and
Warner Brothers released seven during the war), sang or listened to
popular tunes by songsmiths like Irving Berlin, and drank
rum-and-Coke (while listening to Dick Haymes sing the hit "Rum
& Coca-Cola"). While accessible and vastly entertaining, this
is a serious work of history. By treating World War II in Europe
much as Fernand Braudel treated the origins of Western civilization
in his masterpiece The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in
the Age of Philip II, Hatcher brings Braudelian detachment to his
narrative.
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