World War II (1931-1945)
“The Second World War presented a mirror to the human condition which blinded anyone who looked into it.” — Norman Mailer, “The White Negro: Superficial Reflections on the Hipster” (1957)
Of the endless ocean of books on the Second World War, we have dozens and dozens of new and carefully chosen titles. I define it as beginning with the Japanese Empire’s invasion of Manchuria and ending with not only V-E and V-J Days but also the immediate crises of displaced people, the Soviet Union’s creation of the Iron Curtain, and the growing revelations of the extent of the Holocaust.
In significant ways the Second World War was the defining crucible of the 20th Century. The First World War was prelude, the legacy of the 19th Century’s imperialism, and the Cold War was the sequel. Of the making of books about it there is no end — but the persistence of good research and good writing, and good publication underscores the war’s centrality of the world we live in today and the world our descendents will live in for the foreseeable future.
Resistance and Liberation: France at War, 1942-1945
Resistance and Liberation: France at War, 1942-1945
In Resistance and Liberation, Douglas Porch continues his epic history of France at war. Emerging from the debâcle of 1940, France faced the quandary of how to rebuild military power, protect the empire, and resuscitate its global influence. While Charles de Gaulle rejected the armistice and launched his offshore crusade to reclaim French honor within the Allied camp, defeatists at Vichy embraced cooperation with the victorious Axis. The book charts the emerging dynamics of la France libre and the Alliance, Vichy collaboration, and the swelling resistance to the Axis occupation. From the campaigns in Tunisia and Italy to Liberation, Douglas Porch traces how de Gaulle sought to forge a French army and prevent civil war. He captures the experiences of ordinary French men and women caught up in war and defeat, the choices they made, the trials they endured, and how this has shaped France's memory of those traumatic years.
Reviews
‘In this groundbreaking work, Douglas Porch illuminates France’s complicated wartime history from the confused political and military response to the invasion of North Africa, through resistance and liberation, to France’s struggles to achieve a global position in the postwar world.’
Mary Kathryn Barbier - author of Spies, Lies, and Citizenship: The Hunt for Nazi Criminals
‘Moving deftly from the battlefield to grand strategy and from the metropolitan ‘hexagon’ to the reaches of empire, Douglas Porch has given us a striking new picture of France at war that is both comprehensive and analytically incisive. It is a masterpiece!’
Andrew N. Buchanan - author of American Grand Strategy in the Mediterranean during World War II
‘Douglas Porch is a master storyteller: engrossing, enlightening and entertaining. He does full justice to an important dimension of the Second World War that is unfamiliar to many Anglophone readers.’
Richard Carswell - author of The Fall of France in the Second World War: History and Memory39.99