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The Second World Wars: How the First Global Conflict Was Fought and Won Hardcover – Illustrated, October 17, 2017


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A "breathtakingly magisterial" account of World War II by America's preeminent military historian (Wall Street Journal)

World War II was the most lethal conflict in human history. Never before had a war been fought on so many diverse landscapes and in so many different ways, from rocket attacks in London to jungle fighting in Burma to armor strikes in Libya.

The Second World Wars examines how combat unfolded in the air, at sea, and on land to show how distinct conflicts among disparate combatants coalesced into one interconnected global war. Drawing on 3,000 years of military history, bestselling author Victor Davis Hanson argues that despite its novel industrial barbarity, neither the war's origins nor its geography were unusual. Nor was its ultimate outcome surprising. The Axis powers were well prepared to win limited border conflicts, but once they blundered into global war, they had no hope of victory.

An authoritative new history of astonishing breadth,
The Second World Wars offers a stunning reinterpretation of history's deadliest conflict.

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Blurb from the New York Times Book Review for The Second World Wars

Trump Hanson Hanson
The Case for Trump The Dying Citizen The End of Everything
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Explore the Works of Victor D. Hanson A New York Times bestseller and “a brilliant and bracing analysis” (Mark R. Levin) of Donald Trump, his presidency, and his vision of America’s future—now updated for 2024 A New York Times bestseller, “The Dying Citizen is essential reading for any American who cares about the fate of our nation” (Mark R. Levin) In this “gripping account of catastrophic defeat” (Barry Strauss), a New York Times–bestselling historian charts how and why some societies chose to utterly destroy their foes, and warns that similar wars of obliteration are possible in our time

Editorial Reviews

Review

"The Second World Wars by Victor Davis Hanson is breathtakingly magisterial: How can Mr. Hanson make so much we thought we knew so fresh and original?"―Karl Rove, Wall Street Journal

"An extraordinary array of facts and statistics, [
The Second World Wars] offers an account of the fatalism of war."―New Yorker

"
The Second World Wars is an outstanding work of historical interpretation. It is impossible to do justice to such a magnificent book in a short review. Given the vast quantities of ink expended on accounts of this great conflict, one would think that there was not much more left to say. Hanson proves that this belief is wrong. His fresh examination of World War II cements his reputation as a military historian of the first order."―National Review

"Lively and proactive, full of the kind of novel perceptions that can make a familiar subject interesting again."―
New York Times Book Review

"[
The Second World Wars] is written in an energetic and engaging style. Mr. Hanson provides more than enough interesting and original points to make this book essential reading. One thing becomes increasingly clear: The complex of conflicts between 1937 and 1945, because of their unprecedented reach and their death blow to colonialism, brought world history together for the first time."―Wall Street Journal

"Hopefully, [
The Second World Wars] will become required reading for students at professional military schools as an introduction to war in the industrial age as well as to students studying how the 20th century shaped who we are today."―Washington Times

"In his exposition of this thesis, displaying a depth of knowledge of the period that is often simply astounding, Hanson has written what I consider to be the most important single-volume explanation of World War II since Richard Overy's Why the Allies Won (1996)-that is, for a generation."―
Andrew Roberts, Claremont Review of Books

"Even if you feel like you've read everything and then some about World War II, you will find a huge amount in [
The Second World Wars] that is new, fascinating, and enlightening. And more than that, you'll find a way of thinking about how the lowliest practicalities and logistical challenges of war are connected to the highest reaches of geopolitics that will change how you think about both. This is what a great, enduring work of military history looks like."―Yuval Levin, National Review

"[
The Second World Wars] is a brilliant and very original and readable work by a great military historian and contemporary commentator."―New Criterion

"As I struggle in my office to capture Hanson's analytical tour de force in review, I can see the shelf full of books on World War II that I've read over the decades. After reading Wars, I believe I have a firmer grasp of the big picture--very big picture indeed--of how this conflict began, the various tortuous paths it took, and how it resolved the way it did than after digesting all of these other volumes. Reviewers are sometimes over-quick to label a book essential. For readers who wish to fully understand World War II, this book is."―
American Spectator

"Dr. Hanson has written another well-researched and fascinating book. [He] does an excellent job of placing World War II in the historical context of global conflict."―
New York Journal of Books

"In his latest work, noted military historian Victor Davis Hanson provides an utterly original account of what he terms the 'first true global conflict.'"―
History Net

"Victor Davis Hanson's history is thematic. The war is dissected into its constituent parts, allowing the historian to examine at length aspects of the conflict that would be given short shrift in a narrative account. What is remarkable is that despite the absence of a traditional storyline the reader's attention never flags. Indeed, I have learned more in a few days with this dog-eared [book] than I have in a lifetime of interest in World War II."―
Washington Free Beacon

"[Hanson's] unusual approach yields new insights about long-familiar events, making his experiments ingenious and successful."―
America in WWII Magazine

"Perceptive and provocative."―
American Greatness

"Hansen provides a concise, readable and well-researched volume on World War II. It is an excellent starting point for those who know nothing about World War II, and a fresh look at the war for those knowledgeable about it."―
Galveston County's The Daily News

"[Hanson's] insights into the international reach of the conflict are very much worth reading, and in this book as in all his others, the reading momentum never flags."―
Open Letters Monthly

"I loved this book. Strongly recommended."―
Tyler Cowen, Marginal Revolution

"Hanson is a writer who crunches not only numbers but the text itself. He has a gift for brevity, exactness, and clarity. Invariably he brings the wisdom of a lifetime of scholarship, plus his natural intelligence, to bear on judgments about strategy, causes, leadership, and results. [
The Second World Wars] is a fine book, rich in both facts and ideas. It is a triumph for an author/historian with a clear vision, the necessary imagination, and the intellect to explain the past to us on a vast canvas, with clarity, a sense of values, and common sense."―Omaha Dispatch

"[Hanson's] organizational approach allows him to isolate and highlight observations that may surprise even some well-read WWII enthusiasts."―
Publishers Weekly

"An ingenious, always provocative analysis of history's most lethal war."―
Kirkus Reviews, starred review

"
The Second World Wars is a monumental, riveting, and illuminating reappraisal of the first - and hopefully the last - truly global conflict, full of exceptional insights from one of America's greatest living historians. Victor Davis Hanson's account provides an exceptional retrospective on the wars in which a staggering 60 million people perished before the Allies prevailed."―General David Petraeus (US Army, Ret.), former commander of the Surge in Iraq, US Central Command, and coalition forces in Afghanistan and former Director of the CIA

"
The Second World Wars offers an incisive tale for our age of globalization. Yet it is rooted in timeless truths. That is no surprise because Victor Davis Hanson is our greatest historian of western warfare from its origins in ancient Greece. Nobody writes military history like Hanson."―Barry Strauss, author of The Death of Caesar: The Story of History's Greatest Assassination

"Victor Hanson's comprehensive account of World War II is a wonder. Where others have supplied a narrative, he provides analysis. He explores the war's origins; the role played in its conduct by airpower, sea power, infantry, tanks, artillery, industry, and generalship; and the reasons why the Allies won and the Axis lost. This is an eye-opener and a page-turner."―
Paul A. Rahe, Hillsdale College, author of The Grand Strategy of Classical Sparta: The Persian Challenge

"I couldn't put it down. It is rare to encounter a view of the war from the multiple perspectives of the six powers, three on each side, who were the prime combatants, in the elemental theaters of sea and air and land. The analysis is excellent.
The Second World Wars is a major work of historical narrative and deserves to meet readers receptive to its riches."―David Lehman, author of Sinatra's Century

"Victor Davis Hanson has delivered another masterpiece-this time a monumental history of World War II, surpassing all prior attempts at a comprehensive accounting of that cataclysm. Ranging from the deserts of North Africa to the islands of the Pacific, Hanson brings to bear a massive arsenal of insights to illuminate how strategy, culture, industry, and leadership shaped battlefield events and doomed the Axis empires."―
Mark Moyar, author of Oppose Any Foe: The Rise of America's Special Operations Forces

"If you think there is nothing more to be said about World War II, then you haven't read Victor Davis Hanson's
The Second World Wars. Hanson displays an encyclopedic knowledge of every aspect of the conflict, ranging from land to sea to air, and from grand strategy to infantry tactics, to analyze what happened and why. Page after page, he produces dazzling insights informed by his deep knowledge of military history going all the way back to ancient Greece. The Second World Wars is compulsively readable."―Max Boot, author of Invisible Armies, War Made New and The Savage Wars of Peace

About the Author

Victor Davis Hanson is a senior fellow in military history at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University and a professor emeritus of classics at California State University, Fresno. He is the author of over two dozen books, including A War Like No Other, The Second World Wars, and The End of Everything. He lives in Selma, California. 

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Basic Books; Illustrated edition (October 17, 2017)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 720 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0465066984
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0465066988
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 2.25 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.38 x 1.5 x 9.63 inches
  • Customer Reviews:

About the author

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Victor Davis Hanson
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Victor Davis Hanson is a senior fellow in military history and classics at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University and a professor emeritus of classics at California State University, Fresno. He is the author of over two dozen books, including The Second World Wars, The Dying Citizen, and The End of Everything. He lives in Selma, California.

Customer reviews

4.8 out of 5 stars
4.8 out of 5
2,223 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the book great and unique, with a fascinating and thought-provoking writing style. They also describe the author as wonderful and the content as intelligent, fascinating, and refreshing.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

174 customers mention "Content"160 positive14 negative

Customers find the book's content intelligent, fascinating, and detailed. They also describe it as the best holistic examination of the war, useful for casual readers, and insightful. Readers mention that the analysis is concise and without revisionism. They find the discussion insightful and refreshing.

"...but there is so much wisdom and startling insights among those pages that you will be amply rewarded for the time..." Read more

"Hanson has such great insight into history, and he does not disappoint with “The Second World Wars.”..." Read more

"...The historic details are gripping, written with eloquent language. The only thing I can say is, "read this book."..." Read more

"Simply a refreshing and superb analysis on WW2 … its origins, style of conflict, impact on mankind. A must read to have on any WW2 bookshelf" Read more

113 customers mention "Writing style"91 positive22 negative

Customers find the writing style eloquent, thoughtful, and unique. They also say the book is expansive and brilliant, taking a fresh look at the arc of the war.

"...The historic details are gripping, written with eloquent language. The only thing I can say is, "read this book."..." Read more

"...I would highly recommend this book. Great Writer, Easy to read for those just wanting to learn a little more about history." Read more

"...reasonable choice but to fight, I personally found this book highly readable and unique in its approach even to those who have studied WW2 for years..." Read more

"...This paradox is fully explored in this magnificent work, beautifully written and massively researched, it is bound to be a standard in the field of..." Read more

22 customers mention "Author"22 positive0 negative

Customers find Victor Davis-Hanson a wonderful historian and writer. They say the book is a great and factual record of World War II. They also say he is able to speak clearly about the subject.

"...It is a well researched WWII history written by someone who clearly knows his stuff and presents it in an unbiased way...." Read more

"...As far as I am concerned he is the greatest living historian, and the Second World Wars is his greatest book to date...." Read more

"Can't say enough about this book. Victor Davis-Hanson is a wonderful historian and writer...." Read more

"...Excellent book from a great American historian." Read more

19 customers mention "Ww2 history"19 positive0 negative

Customers find the book great and important, providing a fresh look at the arc of the war.

"Simply a refreshing and superb analysis on WW2 … its origins, style of conflict, impact on mankind. A must read to have on any WW2 bookshelf" Read more

"The most unique perspective on WW 2 I’ve yet to read. Hansen is the top of his field. I would teach a class using this piece as the base text...." Read more

"...This is one of the best researched WWII books I've read! Only negative if there's one at all is that it's overloaded with statistics...." Read more

"...It provides an understanding of World War Two that I have found nowhere else...." Read more

9 customers mention "Scope"9 positive0 negative

Customers find the scope of the book staggering, broad, and detailed. They also say it's the best single big picture of WWII, providing a definitive in-depth view of all theaters.

"...Planes and ships are superb, huge, immense...." Read more

"...This large book has a lot of material. Perhaps I expect too much." Read more

"Victor Davis Hanson's The Second World Wars is one of the most expansive and unique books I have ever read on WW2...." Read more

"Should be required reading in history classes devoted to WWII. Staggering in scope, this work covers geopolitical, strategic and even the..." Read more

9 customers mention "Length"3 positive6 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the length of the book. Some find it very long and detailed, while others say it's repetitive. They appreciate the authors' use of long compound sentences with clauses, subclauses, and asides.

"...At 720 pages, this is not a short book (the main text is 590 pages; the rest are sources and end notes), but there is so much wisdom and startling..." Read more

"As with all Mr. Hanson's writings... --very well done. Very long, very detailed. I finally ran out of gas around page 400... I may pick it up again." Read more

"...This is not a short, light read, but I feel this is actually a strength of The Second World Wars; when history is relegated to (often inaccurate) 22..." Read more

"...The authors use of long compound sentences, with clauses, subclauses and asides made reading difficult...." Read more

A fantastic de-constructed history of WWII
5 out of 5 stars
A fantastic de-constructed history of WWII
I loved the way Hanson broke up the telling of the war into different subjects as opposed to pursuing a standard linear approach we are probably all familiar with. He devoted chapters to the the politics of the war in each belligerent country, separated the Air War from the Naval War as well as the ground fighting. His dive into the weaponry did seem a bit shallow, but was overridden by his central thesis that it was the organization and logistics that increasingly accounted for the successes of the belligerents, both in the beginning and as the war progressed. For me his exploration of the cultural backbones of the belligerents and how those cultures shaped and built the leadership and warfighting capability of the nations of the war was by far one of the most impressive I have ever read.For me his method of taking the deep dive into the major subjects and themes of the war and then bringing them back together in summary in the end made this a valuable work of history for the lexicon.
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on October 24, 2019
This may be the best single-volume history of World War II ever written. While it does not get into the low-level details of the war or its individual battles (don't expect to see maps with boxes, front lines, and arrows), it provides an encyclopedic view of the first truly global conflict with a novel and stunning insight every few pages.

Nothing like World War II had ever happened before and, thankfully, has not happened since. While earlier wars may have seemed to those involved in them as involving all of the powers known to them, they were at most regional conflicts. By contrast, in 1945, there were only eleven countries in the entire world which were neutral—not engaged on one side or the other. (There were, of course, far fewer countries then than now—most of Africa and South Asia were involved as colonies of belligerent powers in Europe.) And while war had traditionally been a matter for kings, generals, and soldiers, in this total war the casualties were overwhelmingly (70–80%) civilian. Far from being confined to battlefields, many of the world's great cities, from Amsterdam to Yokohama, were bombed, shelled, or besieged, often with disastrous consequences for their inhabitants.

“Wars” in the title refers to Hanson's observation that what we call World War II was, in reality, a collection of often unrelated conflicts which happened to occur at the same time. The settling of ethnic and territorial scores across borders in Europe had nothing to do with Japan's imperial ambitions in China, or Italy's in Africa and Greece. It was sometimes difficult even to draw a line dividing the two sides in the war. Japan occupied colonies in Indochina under the administration of Vichy France, notwithstanding Japan and Vichy both being nominal allies of Germany. The Soviet Union, while making a massive effort to defeat Nazi Germany on the land, maintained a non-aggression pact with Axis power Japan until days before its surrender and denied use of air bases in Siberia to Allied air forces for bombing campaigns against the home islands.

Combatants in different theatres might have well have been fighting in entirely different wars, and sometimes in different centuries. Air crews on long-range bombing missions above Germany and Japan had nothing in common with Japanese and British forces slugging it out in the jungles of Burma, nor with attackers and defenders fighting building to building in the streets of Stalingrad, or armoured combat in North Africa, or the duel of submarines and convoys to keep the Atlantic lifeline between the U.S. and Britain open, or naval battles in the Pacific, or the amphibious landings on islands they supported.

World War II did not start as a global war, and did not become one until the German invasion of the Soviet Union and the Japanese attack on U.S., British, and Dutch territories in the Pacific. Prior to those events, it was a collection of border wars, launched by surprise by Axis powers against weaker neighbours which were, for the most part, successful. Once what Churchill called the Grand Alliance (Britain, the Soviet Union, and the United States) was forged, the outcome was inevitable, yet the road to victory was long and costly, and its length impossible to foresee at the outset.

The entire war was unnecessary, and its horrific cost can be attributed to a failure of deterrence. From the outset, there was no way the Axis could have won. If, as seemed inevitable, the U.S. were to become involved, none of the Axis powers possessed the naval or air resources to strike the U.S. mainland, no less contemplate invading and occupying it. While all of Germany and Japan's industrial base and population were, as the war progressed, open to bombardment day and night by long-range, four engine, heavy bombers escorted by long-range fighters, the Axis possessed no aircraft which could reach the cities of the U.S. east coast, the oil fields of Texas and Oklahoma, or the industrial base of the midwest. While the U.S. and Britain fielded aircraft carriers which allowed them to project power worldwide, Germany and Italy had no effective carrier forces and Japan's were reduced by constant attacks by U.S. aviation.

This correlation of forces was known before the outbreak of the war. Why did Japan and then Germany launch wars which were almost certain to result in forces ranged against them which they could not possibly defeat? Hanson attributes it to a mistaken belief that, to use Hitler's terminology, the will would prevail. The West had shown itself unwilling to effectively respond to aggression by Japan in China, Italy in Ethiopia, and Germany in Czechoslovakia, and Axis leaders concluded from this, catastrophically for their populations, that despite their industrial, demographic, and strategic military weakness, there would be no serious military response to further aggression (the “bore war” which followed the German invasion of Poland and the declarations of war on Germany by France and Britain had to reinforce this conclusion). Hanson observes, writing of Hitler, “Not even Napoleon had declared war in succession on so many great powers without any idea how to destroy their ability to make war, or, worse yet, in delusion that tactical victories would depress stronger enemies into submission.” Of the Japanese, who attacked the U.S. with no credible capability or plan for invading and occupying the U.S. homeland, he writes, “Tojo was apparently unaware or did not care that there was no historical record of any American administration either losing or quitting a war—not the War of 1812, the Mexican War, the Civil War, the Spanish American War, or World War I—much less one that Americans had not started.” (Maybe they should have waited a few decades….)

Compounding the problems of the Axis was that it was essentially an alliance in name only. There was little or no co-ordination among its parties. Hitler provided Mussolini no advance notice of the attack on the Soviet Union. Mussolini did not warn Hitler of his attacks on Albania and Greece. The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor was as much a surprise to Germany as to the United States. Japanese naval and air assets played no part in the conflict in Europe, nor did German technology and manpower contribute to Japan's war in the Pacific. By contrast, the Allies rapidly settled on a division of labour: the Soviet Union would concentrate on infantry and armoured warfare (indeed, four out of five German soldiers who died in the war were killed by the Red Army), while Britain and the U.S. would deploy their naval assets to blockade the Axis, keep the supply lines open, and deliver supplies to the far-flung theatres of the war. U.S. and British bomber fleets attacked strategic targets and cities in Germany day and night. The U.S. became the untouchable armoury of the alliance, delivering weapons, ammunition, vehicles, ships, aircraft, and fuel in quantities which eventually surpassed those all other combatants on both sides combined. Britain and the U.S. shared technology and cooperated in its development in areas such as radar, antisubmarine warfare, aircraft engines (including jet propulsion), and nuclear weapons, and shared intelligence gleaned from British codebreaking efforts.

As a classicist, Hanson examines the war in its incarnations in each of the elements of antiquity: Earth (infantry), Air (strategic and tactical air power), Water (naval and amphibious warfare), and Fire (artillery and armour), and adds People (supreme commanders, generals, workers, and the dead). He concludes by analysing why the Allies won and what they ended up winning—and losing. Britain lost its empire and position as a great power (although due to internal and external trends, that might have happened anyway). The Soviet Union ended up keeping almost everything it had hoped to obtain through its initial partnership with Hitler. The United States emerged as the supreme economic, industrial, technological, and military power in the world and promptly entangled itself in a web of alliances which would cause it to underwrite the defence of countries around the world and involve it in foreign conflicts far from its shores.

Hanson concludes,

“The tragedy of World War II—a preventable conflict—was that sixty million people had perished to confirm that the United States, the Soviet Union, and Great Britain were far stronger than the fascist powers of Germany, Japan, and Italy after all—a fact that should have been self-evident and in no need of such a bloody laboratory, if not for prior British appeasement, American isolationism, and Russian collaboration.”

At 720 pages, this is not a short book (the main text is 590 pages; the rest are sources and end notes), but there is so much wisdom and startling insights among those pages that you will be amply rewarded for the time you spend reading them.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 28, 2024
Hanson has such great insight into history, and he does not disappoint with “The Second World Wars.” I have read many books on World War II and in general it is a good prerequisite before this book. My personal recommendation would be to read Rick Atkinson’s trilogy on the war in Europe and Ian Toll’s trilogy on the war in the Pacific followed by Victor Davis Hanson’s book. Hanson provides details that I either did not know or did not contemplate the impact or importance, well worth reading.
Reviewed in the United States on January 5, 2024
This is THE book for anyone wanting to truly understand WWII, as well as the human behaviors resulting in sixty million deaths. The historic details are gripping, written with eloquent language. The only thing I can say is, "read this book." It reinforces the character and sacrificial nature of a special generation of American and British citizens, and explains how the Second World Wars were not one war, but many. I own many books in my library. This is my favorite one on history!
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Reviewed in the United States on December 12, 2019
This is not any kind of usual history. Instead of chronological, he splits it into major sections (air, land, water, ideas, people) and divides those up into a few chapters. That part takes some getting used to, but is well done.

What sets my teeth on edge is he uses way too many adjectives. Planes and ships are superb, huge, immense. Sometimes these adjectives get in each others' way: the Essex class carriers are a fantastic improvement over the Wasp, but also only an incremental improvement. B-17s and B-24s are huge, so he has to really exaggerate how big B-29s are. It gets a little tedious. I got to wondering how much shorter the book would be without all the adjectives.

All these adjective also lead to exaggerations and miscomparisons which, while not exactly errors, do make you wonder how well he really knows his field, and not just with equipment. Some of the exaggerations are so wild that you wonder if he just got carried away or did invent something out of whole cloth.

A different problem is the disorganization I mentioned in the headline. Once you get into the individual chapters which make up each major section, you feel like a pinball being bounced all over the topic. It's not entirely disorganized, but it feels like a scavenger hunt more than a planned tour. He bounces among time, technology, allies or axis, geography, and after a while you realize he's been over the same ground before, but that was time-wise, now it's geographical, next it will be by technology.

It's not a disaster. You do get sort of used to it. But think about those tours where if it's Tuesday, it's Paris, and tomorrow will be Berlin, and then London, then Moscow. Back and forth, here, there, here again, and you check your watch, check the calendar, and wish there were an itinerary and that the tour guide would slow down, take a breath, and stop consulting a thesaurus for new adjectives.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 24, 2024
Simply a refreshing and superb analysis on WW2 … its origins, style of conflict, impact on mankind. A must read to have on any WW2 bookshelf
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Reviewed in the United States on March 12, 2024
For someone new to reading about World War II, this book was extremely easy to read and kept my attention. It really opened my eyes to what these young men and women went through during this time. I learned things I didn’t know before. I read this to get a better perspective of what my grandfather might have experienced. I would highly recommend this book. Great Writer, Easy to read for those just wanting to learn a little more about history.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 16, 2024
I learned a great deal about the belligerents, their interactions, losses, and many details of which I was unaware. Hanson explains many of ideas behind the acts of the numerous parties, and by there were changes. This book should be read by all who believe they know the causes, rationale, and results of wars, especially today.
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Top reviews from other countries

Anders E
5.0 out of 5 stars Great read! New knowledge unlocked
Reviewed in Sweden on June 23, 2024
Being an avid reader of World War 2-books I found this incredibly fresh, highly engaging and very thought provoking. VDH really brings forth the basic numbers of how the war was won. One simple fact that I've never knew is that Germany never manufactured a 4 engine long range bomber aircraft. Had they done that they could have done so much more damage to Great Britain and other countries, which could have changed the outcome of the war. Maybe not the final outcome, it would be mathematically impossible for Germany to win, but an outcome with much higher casualties among the Allies. I would place this book in the top 5 of must read books about World War 2.
Glock22C
5.0 out of 5 stars Lettura obbligatoria
Reviewed in Italy on March 27, 2023
Per tutti gli appassionati di storia militare, per tutti coloro che aspirano ad incarichi di pianificazione strategica negli Stati Maggiori, e per chi è chiamato a prendere decisioni politico/strategiche, questa dovrebbe essere una lettura obbligatoria. Si tratta di una disamina a livello strategico della Seconda Guerra Mondiale piena di informazioni e spunti di riflessione che spesso sfuggono anche ai più attenti cultori della materia, da cui trarre lezioni universali. Lo ritengo una pietra miliare. Suggerisco la versione in lingua originale, la traduzione italiana è così piena di errori che per disperazione ho ripreso la lettura da capo nella versione originale.
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Mitch Cohen
5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant book -- as can be expected from one by Victor Davis Hanson
Reviewed in Germany on February 16, 2023
Extremely thoroughly researched and fascinating presentation -- for those with intense interest in the Second World War(s)
Cliente Amazon
5.0 out of 5 stars ok
Reviewed in Spain on January 25, 2021
buen libro.
Mr. Geoffrey H. Thorne
5.0 out of 5 stars Unusual system of writing, but eminently successful
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on October 23, 2020
I like those books of Victor Lewis Hanson that I have read, so I bought this in hard-back, and, subsequently, in paperback (when the hardback book became damaged). It is now my go-to book on the 2nd WW, taking over from Roberts, Beevor and Hastings. The oddness of the writing is that, rather than writing chronologically, he writes on separate subjects in 7 parts entitled Ideas, Air, Water, Earth, Fire, People and Ends. Within those Parts, there are varying numbers of subdivisions. The fact is that there is cause for readers to see a new slant on hitherto familiar subjects, which makes this book a fascinating read. For English readers, I have to say that it is a real pleasure to read a book by an American author who gives credit to British Admirals and Generals , a virtue which he shares with Craig Symonds.
I do not hesitate to recommend this book to anyone who is interested in a different slant in writing about the 2nd World War.
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