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Book Description
Stephen E. Ambrose draws from more than 1,400 interviews with American, British, Canadian, French, and German veterans to create the preeminent chronicle of the most important day in the twentieth century. Ambrose reveals how the original plans for the invasion were abandoned, and how ordinary soldiers and officers acted on their own initiative.
D-Day is above all the epic story of men at the most demanding moment of their existence, when the horrors, complexities, and triumphs of life are laid bare. Ambrose portrays the faces of courage and heroism, fear and determination — what Eisenhower called "the fury of an aroused democracy" — that shaped the victory of the citizen soldiers whom Hitler had disparaged.
Amazon.com
Published to mark the 50th anniversary of the invasion of Normandy, Stephen E. Ambrose's D-Day: June 6, 1944 relies on over 1,400 interviews with veterans, as well as prodigious research in military archives on both sides of the Atlantic. He provides a comprehensive history of the invasion which also eloquently testifies as to how common soldiers performed extraordinary feats. A major theme of the book, upon which Ambrose would later expand in Citizen Soldiers, is how the soldiers from the democratic Allied nations rose to the occasion and outperformed German troops thought to be invincible. The many small stories that Ambrose collected from paratroopers, sailors, infantrymen, and civilians make the excitement, confusion, and sheer terror of D-day come alive on the page.
--Robert McNamara
From Publishers Weekly
Using eyewitness accounts from both sides of the battlefield, Ambrose reconstructs the invasion that turned the tables of WWII in favor of the allies.
From Library Journal
World War II buffs have always liked books about the Normandy invasions, but most popular accounts are now several years old. Ambrose has updated the familiar story of the massive amphibious landings with new information, deft historical perspective, and a gripping narrative. Several opening chapters about the strategic situation and the laborious preparations for the invasion keep this book from becoming just another battlefield drama. His portraits of the various military commanders are superb. Numerous interviews with Allied veterans provide fresh material for the vital human element of the story, and accounts from German survivors show the enemy's viewpoint. The result is the best popular history since Max Hastings's vigorous Overload: D-Day and the Battle for Normandy (LJ 6/1/84), detailed enough for the historian yet with plenty of action for the lay reader. Recommended for public and military collections.
--Raymond L. Puffer, U.S. Air Force History Prog., Edwards AFB
From Booklist
An expert on D-Day, Ambrose heads a premier oral history archive based in New Orleans. He has written invasion-related narratives on both the macro (a two-volume biography of General Eisenhower, 1983 and 1991) and the micro (Band of Brothers: E Company, 501st Regiment, 1992) scales. This fiftieth anniversary salvo brackets the big and small as it finds the range on its target: the critical first hours of American landings on Utah and Omaha Beaches, and concurrent paratroop drops behind the lines. Ambrose calls his text a "love song to democracy." Since it draws from some 1200 eyewitness testimonials collected in his archive, however, his book might more accurately be thought of as an organization of the chaotic, terrifying, and courageous experiences of the first soldiers to face the Nazi hellfire. An excellent editor of the raw material, who knows Pointe du Hoc as if he had scaled it himself, Ambrose situates his pungent, laconic, and gruesome quotations at virtually the exact spots where they were uttered, and he is completely unbashful in his patriotic reverence for the sacrifices these men made. A consuming and highly readable memorial to the day's infantry-unit victors--one that World War II veterans will demand in strength. Ambrose's is the leading and required element in the coming wave of commemorative books. (Watch for the round-up review in the May 1 Booklist)
Gilbert Taylor
From Kirkus Reviews
A splendid, moving, and authoritative account of the most decisive day of WW II by Ambrose (History/Univ. of New Orleans), whose massive biographies of Eisenhower and Nixon have won widespread praise. Based on ``the most extensive first-person, I-was-there collection of memoirs of a single battle in existence,'' Ambrose moves easily between the strategy of each side and the individual recollections of the battle. He conveys not only the magnitude of the enterprise but its complexity. He also suggests some significant changes to the conventional interpretation of the war, most notably in the view hitherto taken about the respective quality of leadership and soldiers on each side. He contradicts the belief in the superiority of the German soldiers and says that the higher losses they inflicted against the Anglo-American armies derived from the necessity for the latter to take the offensive. The German army was, he writes, ``inferior in all respects (except for weaponry, especially the 88s and the machine guns) to its allied opponents.'' He call Rommel's plan to stop the Allied invasion on the beach ``one of the greatest blunders in military history,'' and he compares the strategy to that of the French Maginot line. By contrast, he argues that Eisenhower's judgment was generally right and that he not only inspired his subordinates but also showed courage in rejecting suggestions for an alternative strategy from Army Chief of Staff George Marshall. But most memorable in the account are the tales of individual heroism, from the 16-year-old French girl who, with a group of companions, paralyzed the German Second Panzer Division by removing the axle grease from its transporters and substituting an abrasive, to the Canadian soldier who threw himself down on barbed wire to enable his companions to use his body as a ladder. A brilliant account that blends perfectly the human and the strategic dimensions of this great battle. (First printing of 100,000; first serial to U.S. News & World Report; Book-of-the- Month Club main selection; History Book Club main selection)
Book Dimension :
length: (cm)23.3 width:(cm)15.6
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从文学性的角度来看,作者的语言功力实在是一绝。他似乎有一种魔力,能将冰冷的历史数据和密集的军事术语,转化为富有画面感和诗意的文字。有些段落的描写,简直可以单独摘出来作为散文来欣赏。比如他描述拂晓时分海面上薄雾弥漫的景象,那种将壮美与残酷并置的笔法,极具感染力。阅读体验极为流畅,虽然篇幅不短,但句子的结构错落有致,长句的铺陈与短句的突兀形成了鲜明的节奏感,仿佛作者在引导你的呼吸。而且,他对不同场景的语言风格进行了精妙的区隔:在记录情报传输时,语言是精准、克制的;而在描绘等待登船时的焦虑时,则充满了感官的细节和内心的独白。这种语言上的多样性和适应性,极大地丰富了阅读的层次感,让每一个章节都有自己独特的“声调”。
评分这本书的装帧设计非常引人注目,那种复古的字体搭配深沉的封面颜色,一下子就把我的思绪拉回到了那个特定的历史时刻。内页的纸张质感也处理得恰到好处,既有历史的厚重感,又不失阅读的舒适度。我特别喜欢它在细节上的处理,比如扉页上印着的那段简短却有力的引文,瞬间点燃了我对书中故事的好奇心。我本以为这会是一本纯粹的军事历史记录,但翻开后发现,作者的笔触远比我想象的要细腻得多。他似乎不仅仅是在描绘宏大的战争场面,更是在捕捉那些被历史洪流裹挟着的个体命运。那种对细节的执着,让整本书的画面感极其强烈,仿佛我能闻到硝烟的味道,感受到士兵们在黎明前的紧张与期盼。这本书的排版也做得非常用心,图文穿插得自然流畅,那些珍贵的历史照片和地图,起到了画龙点睛的作用,让枯燥的年代信息变得鲜活起来。整体而言,光是这本书的外在呈现,就已经值回票价了,它不仅仅是一本书,更像是一件可以被珍藏的艺术品。
评分这本书最让我震撼的是它对“人性”在极端环境下的剖析。它没有简单地将角色塑造成英雄或者恶棍,而是展现了人性的复杂和灰色地带。那些在生死关头做出艰难选择的人,他们的动机、他们的恐惧,都被作者进行了深层次的挖掘。我看到有人在绝境中迸发出惊人的勇气,也有人因为极度的压力而崩溃,甚至做出违背常理的举动。作者似乎对“道德”的定义持有一种审慎的态度,他只是呈现事实,将评判的权利交还给了读者。这种不预设立场的写作方式,使得这本书的思想深度远超一般的历史读物。它迫使我去思考,在那样一个历史的十字路口,我们每个人会如何应对?这不仅仅是关于一场战役的故事,更是一部关于人类意志力和道德极限的深刻研究。我合上书本时,脑海中浮现的不是战术部署,而是那些鲜活的面孔,他们在那一刻所做的选择,具有永恒的哲学意味。
评分这本书的史料价值和研究深度令人叹服,它显然是建立在大量一手资料和严谨考证之上的。我能感受到作者在幕后付出的巨大心血,他似乎翻阅了大量的档案、信件,甚至可能包括一些不常被公开的研究报告。最让我印象深刻的是,他对于一些关键历史节点的描述,提供了多方位的解读,而非单一的官方叙事。这种严谨的治学态度,让这本书不仅具有很强的可读性,更具有重要的参考价值。对于任何对那个时代背景有深度探究意愿的人来说,这本书都是一个绝佳的起点,甚至可以说是里程碑式的作品。它提供了一个宏大叙事框架下的精确注脚,让历史不再是模糊的背景板,而是被细致描摹的、充满细节的立体空间。这种对真相的执着追求,让这本书的厚重感无与伦比。
评分读完之后,我最大的感受是那种深沉的、近乎窒息的真实感。作者在叙事上采取了一种非常冷静克制的态度,没有过多的煽情,却在不经意间将人物内心的挣扎和恐惧展现得淋漓尽致。我尤其欣赏他对于“决策层”与“前线士兵”两种视角切换的技巧。前一秒还在描绘最高指挥部的沙盘推演和政治博弈,后一秒马上就将视角拉到了泥泞的滩头,一个年轻士兵绝望的眼神,一个老兵麻木的动作,那种强烈的对比,让人在精神上受到巨大的冲击。这种叙事上的张力,使得阅读过程充满了一种持续的紧张感,你会忍不住去猜测下一步会发生什么,但同时又害怕揭开下一页。这本书的叙事节奏把控得炉火纯青,它不会让你感到拖沓,也不会让你觉得信息量过载,每一次转折都像是精准计算过的时间点,狠狠地击中了读者的情感神经。看完最后一章,我花了很长时间才从那种氛围中抽离出来,那份沉甸甸的感觉久久不能散去。
评分微信上在D日那天刷屏,基本上,不论滩头,空投,前期谍报,后期打通战略纵深。诺曼底基本是大规模登陆作战的教科书。
评分微信上在D日那天刷屏,基本上,不论滩头,空投,前期谍报,后期打通战略纵深。诺曼底基本是大规模登陆作战的教科书。
评分微信上在D日那天刷屏,基本上,不论滩头,空投,前期谍报,后期打通战略纵深。诺曼底基本是大规模登陆作战的教科书。
评分微信上在D日那天刷屏,基本上,不论滩头,空投,前期谍报,后期打通战略纵深。诺曼底基本是大规模登陆作战的教科书。
评分微信上在D日那天刷屏,基本上,不论滩头,空投,前期谍报,后期打通战略纵深。诺曼底基本是大规模登陆作战的教科书。
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