The Last Battle: Cornelius Ryan
The Last Battle: Cornelius Ryan
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From the author of The Longest Day. On Monday, April 16, 1945, an artillery barrage announced the opening Russian attack against Berlin. Russian troops were less than thirty-eight miles from Berlins centre. In fourteen days Hitler would be dead. In twenty-one days, the war would be over. Forty-five miles to the west, advance units of the U.S. Ninth army were angrily and reluctantly turning back. Berlin was no longer a military objective. This book is the story of three weeks in which the city of Berlin - gutted, smouldering, terrorised, yet miraculously still alive - was the focal point of millions of lives: the last obstacle of the triumphant Allies, the last defence for the Germans and the last refuge for Hitler. Illustrated with black and white photos.
Product Information
1st edition Collins 1966; hardback; dust jacket is price-clipped with repaired tears and edge chips; pictorial endpapers; tightly bound and cclean within, MilitariaShare
