Reading up on World War II
- Share via
Just imagine for a moment that you have gone back in time 60 years to
this week in 1945. Picture how extraordinary the Victory in Europe
celebrations must have been for the boys at the front, the thousands
upon thousands of people jammed into Times Square, the grannies
dancing in Piccadilly Circus with the GIs, while the bombers returned
home for the last time to their British airfields.
Though the enormous effort and sacrifice of that greatest
generation was only half spent, there also must have been a hopeful
sense that the war in the Pacific must end soon as well.
World War II may have occurred many generations ago, but its
impact is still felt around the world. There have been many books
written about its many sacrifices, and in recent years, we have seen
more and more memoirs and reexaminations of the facts as secret files
have been released.
“Countdown to Victory: The Final European Campaigns of World War
II,” by Barry Turner, reveals the true suffering of the troops during
the most bitter and bloodiest fighting on the western front, as the
Allied leaders strove to work together amid petty rivalries and
resentments.
In “The Path to Victory: The Mediterranean Theater in World War
II,” author Douglas Porch focuses on an often-neglected facet of the
war in Europe. The war effort in North Africa and Italy drew German
resources away from the western front, and the campaign eventually
led Germany into its disastrous push on Russia.
But for a sweeping overview that is at once a highly readable
account and a tome for the serious military historian, Max Hastings’
“Armageddon: The Battle for Germany, 1944-1945” makes use of recently
released Allied and Soviet documents to revisit the final months that
led to the Germans’ surrender on May 8, 1945.
Though these books are heroic in scale and grim in their accounts,
there are two recent books that focus on a little known, but
enormously important, factor in the victory in Europe. This would be
the 23rd Headquarters Special Troops.
Formed at the urging of Douglas Fairbanks Jr., the 23rd was
comprised of 1,100 men, including designer Bill Blass, painter
Ellsworth Kelly, and photographer Art Kane.
“Secret Soldiers: How a Troupe of American Artists, Designers and
Sonic Wizards Won World War II’s Battles of Deceptions Against the
Germans” by Philip Gerard, and “Ghost Army of World War II” by Jack
Kneece, each tell the story of theater designers, painters, sound
technicians and others, who were recruited expressly to deceive the
German Army. Through the use of sound effects, camouflage, fake radio
broadcasts, inflatable boats and planes, the 23rd routinely fooled
the Germans into believing misinformation about Allied troops. The
existence of this unit was classified until 1996, and now its heroic
and inventive efforts are getting their due.
For these and other books about all facets of World War II, just
contact the reference desk at the Central Library or any of its
branches.
* CHECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Public
Library. This week’s column is by Sara Barnicle. All titles may be
reserved from home or office computers by accessing the catalog at
https://www.newportbeach library.org. For more information on the
Central Library or any of the branch locations, please contact the
Newport Beach Public Library at (949) 717-3800, option 2.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.