Click Here to go to the Books Historical Home Page


War Books • Army Books • Navy Books • Airforce Books • Royalty Books • Militaria Books • Weapon Books • Ancient History
Books Historical Logo

Description: D-Day is a brilliant collection of German and Allied eyewitness accounts of what it was really like to parachute by night into Normandy, to defend the beaches from within the German bunker, to splash fearfully ashore under machine-gun and artillery fire, to be a victim of the relentless Allied air attacks or to struggle from a burning tank brewed-up by the deadly 88’s.

Many books have been written about the Normandy landings, but Robert Kershaw brings a new perspective by drawing heavily on German and Allied sources little used in the standard accounts. The actual landings and the subsequent few days of battle to consolidate them often resolved themselves into a multitude of desperate small-scale struggles – for the next few yards of beach, to cross the next field, or to reach the next hedgerow. By looking at the battles at precisely this level, Robert Kershaw is able to develop new insights into the failures and successes of both sides, and to show why the battle for Normandy developed into the long and bitter struggle that has become so well known. 

He features extracts from the German telephone log for Omaha Beach, bringing the landings to life. He analyses the failure by both sides appropriately to balance tank and infantry forces in the difficult Normandy terrain, and examines why the Allies, with local superiority in the early days, were unable to break-out earlier, or form a larger bridgehead.  He shows how the D-Day struggle was not concluded in a single ‘Longest’ day but was in fact a 10-day battle for the Normandy foreshore to decide whether the Allied lodgement would hold, or the Germans push the invaders into the sea.

World War Books • Army Books • Navy Books • RAF Books • King & Queen Books • Militaria Books • Ancient History Books
Site design by Zoe Grice Copyright © 2003

Click Here to go to the Books Historical Home Page