<p>
<strong>EARLY PRAISE FOR <em>SWORD</em>:</strong>
</p>
<p>‘The messy, dirty, bloody reality of Operation Overlord comes alive in <em>Sword</em>, Hastings’s portrait of the individual soldiers who risked their lives on the beaches of Normandy. He brings these men to life with sensitivity and beautiful prose'</p>
<p>
<strong>
<em>The Times</em>
</strong>
</p>
<p>‘The transporting of 150,000 troops across the Channel in total secrecy and the feats they did that day is a story we never tire of – and Max Hastings tells it exceedingly well. His is one of the most reliable brands in popular history and <em>Sword </em>meets his usual standards. A cracking tale in the hands of a practised storyteller'</p>
<p>
<strong>
<em>Spectator</em>
</strong>
</p>
<p>‘D-Day was one of the British army’s finest hours, perhaps <em>the </em>finest. The author has matched that hour admirably'</p>
<p>
<strong>
<em>Country Life</em>
</strong>
</p>
<p>
<strong>PRAISE FOR <em>OPERATION BITING</em>:</strong>
</p>
<p>'There are few things in life more dependable than a war story told by Hastings… He’s a master of drama, a writer intimately familiar with the mind of the soldier'</p>
<p>
<strong>
<em>The Times</em>
</strong>
</p>
<p>‘An important book, and proof that the detailed telling of a small piece of history can illuminate our understanding of a much greater whole. It’s one in a long line of Second World War books written by Hastings in an engaging and entertaining way. Now that almost all the veterans of the conflict are no longer with us, his work is especially valuable: all that remains is the history, and the historians who tell it'</p>
<p>
<strong>
<em>Daily Telegraph</em>
</strong>
</p>
‘The messy, dirty, bloody reality of Operation Overlord comes alive in Sword, Hastings’s portrait of the individual soldiers who risked their lives on the beaches of Normandy. He brings these men to life with sensitivity and beautiful prose' THE TIMES
On 6 June 1944 when the Allied armies landed on D-Day, the Second World War had already lasted almost five years. Yet many of the British and American troops who invaded Normandy were virgin soldiers, never before committed to battle. They quit England in summertime to face within hours a storm of machine-gun and mortar fire. They witnessed scenes, above all of sudden death, such as no exercise had prepared them for.
In Sword, veteran chronicler of war Max Hastings explores with extraordinary vividness the actions of the Commando brigade and Montgomery’s 3rd Infantry and 6th Airborne divisions on and around a single beach. He describes their frustrations, hopes, loves and fears through the apparently interminable years training and preparing in England, then their triumphs and tragedies on the beach and beyond. Here are the airborne assaults on the Caen Canal bridge and Merville Battery, the battles on the shoreline and against the German strongpoints inland, narrated and explained with all the insights that Hastings’ decades of study, veterans’ interviews and new archive research enable him to deploy.
The book offers a searching analysis of why British troops did not reach Caen on 6 June, as Montgomery had promised Churchill that they would – and the story of the brigadier who was sacked for that failure. There is also a host of personal portraits of key figures from Commando leader Lord Lovat, famously brave but supremely arrogant, to Colonel Jim Eadie, whose tanks of the Staffordshire Yeomanry repulsed a panzer division in the last hours of 6 June, and some of the humbler participants to whom extraordinary things happened.
This is the story of D-Day as you have never read it before, with the blend of narrative, analysis and human insight that made Max Hastings’ last book Operation Biting, like many of his earlier works, a Sunday Times No. 1 bestseller.
‘The messy, dirty, bloody reality of Operation Overlord comes alive in Sword, Hastings’s portrait of the individual soldiers who risked their lives on the beaches of Normandy. He brings these men to life with sensitivity and beautiful prose' THE TIMES
The gripping military history of D-Day and Sword Beach from the Sunday Times bestselling author
• #1 BESTSELLING AUTHOR, WRITING ON THE AREA HE KNOWS AND HANDLES BEST: THE THICKEST ACTION AND BIGGEST HUMAN STORIES OF WW2, WITH A BRITISH SKEW
• RETURNING TO THE SUCCESS OF HIS MOST RECENT WW2 NARRATIVES: OPERATION BITING, CHASTISE (50K HBs, 40K PBs) AND OPERATION PEDESTAL (41K HBs, 31K PBs)
• HUGE SALES RECORD:
WELL OVER 2M MAX HASTINGS BOOKS SOLD IN UK AND EXPORT
All Hell Let Loose – 142k HB, 150k PB
Catastrophe – 111k HB, 105k PB
Vietnam – 102k HB, 87k PB
The Secret War – 84k HB, 84k PB
Competition: Victory 45; Allies at War; Endgame 1944; Sky Warriors; SAS; Berlin; Stalin Affair; Savage Continent; The End; Agent Zo; Nazi Mind; The Spy and Traitor. James Holland; Saul David; Tim Bouverie; Jonathan Dimbleby; Damien Lewis; Antony Beevor; Giles Milton; Keith Lowe; Ian Kershaw; Clare Mulley; Laurence Rees; Ben Macintyre
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
MAX HASTINGS is the author of over thirty books, most about conflict, and between 1986 and 2002 served as editor-in-chief of the Daily Telegraph, then editor of the Evening Standard. He has won many prizes both for journalism and his books, of which the most recent are Chastise, Operation Pedestal and Abyss, bestsellers translated around the world. He is a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, an Honorary Fellow of King ’ s College, London and was knighted in 2002. He has two grown-up children, Charlotte and Harry, and lives with his wife Penny in West Berkshire, where they garden enthusiastically.