Autor: |
Wydawca: | Da Capo Lifelong Books |
Ilość stron: | 512 |
Autor: | Whitlock Flint |
Każdy sprzedawca w empik.com jest przedsiębiorcą. Wszystkie obowiązki związane z umową sprzedaży ciążą na sprzedawcy.
Dodaj ten produkt do jednej z utworzonych przez Ciebie list i zachowaj go na później.
Sprawdź jak złożyć zamówienie krok po kroku.
Możesz też zadzwonić pod numer +48 22 462 72 50 nasi konsultanci pomogą Ci złożyć zamówienie.
The Allied landings at Anzio, on the Italian coast, six months before the Normandy invasion were intended as an "end run" around the stalemate that had developed in Italy. The planners hoped that the Allied invasion would surprise the Germans and threaten their defensive line in southern Europe. But the invasion stalled a few miles inland and the Allies faced a five-month bloody fight. In the end, American and British troops accomplished one of the great defensive stands of all time, turning defeat into victory.
Using previously unpublished archival material, including memoirs from American, British, and German veterans, award-winning historian Flint Whitlock reveals the entire allied and German campaign, never forgetting the experiences of the soldiers in muddy, freezing, water-filled foxholes, struggling to hold off endless waves of infantry assaults, aerial bombardments, and artillery barrages.
Desperate Valour is the first comprehensive account of the unrelenting slugfest at Anzio and a stirring chronicle of courage beyond measure.
ID produktu: | 1189272051 |
Tytuł: | Desperate Valour: Triumph at Anzio |
Autor: | Whitlock Flint |
Wydawca: | Da Capo Lifelong Books |
Język wydania: | english |
Ilość stron: | 512 |
Rok wydania: | 2018 |
Okładka: | twarda |
Wymiary [mm]: | 43 x 231 x 157 |
Indeks: | 41551691 |
62,49 zł (-47%) cena regularna
ocen
Podziel się na Facebooku
Właśnie zrecenzowałem Desperate Valour: Triumph at Anzio
The Allied landings at Anzio, on the Italian coast, six months before the Normandy invasion were intended as an "end run" around the stalemate that had developed in Italy. The planners hoped that the