Publication

2006-03-21 - Da Capo Press, a member of the Perseus Books Group, Cambridge, MA

Language

English

Word Count

89,500 words, Guess

Page Count

358 pages

Physical Format

Hardcover

Identifiers

  • Internet Archiveisbn_9780306814679
  • ISBN-100306814676
  • ISBN-139780306814679
  • Goodreads68512
  • LibraryThing1327755
and 3 more
  • Library of Congress Control Number2008299408
  • Better World Books9780306814679
  • Open LibraryOL9882397M

Classifications

  • LCCD748 .B45 2006
  • LCCD748.B45 2006

Description

While their nations fought countless battles in the field, these four great warlords of the twentieth century tried to outmaneuver and outwit each other in a different sort of battle that would determine the fate of Europe and the world. At the heart of this private war was a series of psychological duels in which they lied, schemed, charmed, flattered, and deceived to attain the ultimate victory. These duels signaled a seismic shift in world power, from the age of European empires to the age of two ideologically opposed superpowers. In Warlords, Simon Berthon and Joanna Potts have crafted a gripping narrative -- a unique combination of innovative style and thorough scholarship. Here is World War II seen through the eyes and minds of Hitler, Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin. Structured along the lines of a cinematic thriller, rapidly intercutting between the four titans, the book reveals a blow-by-blow account of their individual efforts to outthink and outfight each other. At times chronicling events as they unfold day by day or even hour by hour, Warlords reveals unparalleled insights into parallel actions -- from Roosevelt and Churchill's complex yet crucial friendship to Hitler and Stalin's collaboration, betrayal, and backbiting. By using the words of the warlords and those who observed them at the time, the authors unravel the psychology of four wartime leaders facing history's greatest conflict. Moving from the White House and Whitehall to the Wolf's Lair and the Kremlin, Warlords examines the strengths and weaknesses of men locked in a confrontation with consequences for the entire world. - Jacket flap.

First Sentence

Monday, May 13, 1940. Hilter's Panzer divisions burst from the forests of the Ardennes, the wooded barrier which the French high command had considered impenetrable.

Subjects

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