Synopses & Reviews
Fought 65 years ago this December, the Battle of the Bulge still ranks as the single largest battle ever fought by the United States Army. More men, vehicles, supplies, equipment, aircraft, and effort went into this thirty-day battle than into any other in American history. It was larger than Gettysburg, larger than the Gulf War, larger than the landings in Normandy that ignited the fuse that carried the army halfway across Europe to the blood-stained snow of the Ardennes.
Thirty-one American divisions—fully a third of the U.S. Army raised during World War II—saw action in this battle. As a result, it was a quintessentially American moment. It was also a test: could this conscript army from a pacifistic democracy defeat the best remaining men and machines a totalitarian government could produce?
The story of the Bulge is the story of panic, fear, and physical misery. It is the story of how a generation of draftees, National Guardsmen, and a small core of regular officers and NCOs faced those three elements as snow piled around their foxholes and the incessant drumming of artillery splintered the woods that gave them shelter. It is the story of men, frozen and hurting, far from home with little hope of seeing it again until the killing finally ended.
The most complete and awe-inspiring illustrated history on the infamous battle, The Battle of the Bulge: The Photographic History of an American Triumph places readers in the frozen foxholes, haunting forests, and devastated villages of the Ardennes during the winter of 1944/1945. Making use of over 500 gripping photographs, many never before published, author John Bruning tells the story of the Bulge with insightful detail, replaying the thrusts and volleys of both the Allied and German forces during the tumultuous battle.
The Battle of the Bulge is a fitting tribute to the men who braved the weather, and the odds, in order to stem the tide of the German war machine.
Review
Army Magazine
“Military historian and author John R. Bruning wanted to tell the story of this battle ‘through the photographs taken by brave and dedicated combat cameramen,’ and he does so in The Battle of the Bulge. The text is accompanied by more than 400 photographs, some never before published. The majority of them are black and white, with a few color photographs interspersed. They portray not only American troops, but Germans as well, with snowy forest expanses and decimated urban ruins serving as backdrops. Some photos were taken in the heat of battle; others in the sad aftermath….Along with the photographs, Bruning provides a detailed account of the battle, beginning with background discussion of the race to the Seigfried Line and analysis of Hitler’s plan. He then gives a detailed play-by-play of the action—the moves and countermoves on various sections of the battlefield….The images in The Battle of the Bulge convey with stark honesty the brutality of war, along with the fraternity and solidarity it inspires. Sixty-five years after the largest land battle in U.S. Army history, those American soldiers who ‘played a vital role in defeating the Third Reich’s last offensive and turned it into a death spasm instead of a victory march’ still stand as the ‘ultimate symbol of who Americans are as a nation and a people.’”
The Free Lance-Star
“The body of work dealing with the 1944-45 Battle of the Bulge is extensive, yet in his photographic history, John R. Bruning adds to it by providing further understanding of its importance and, more impressively, what participants went through. The 300-page book is made up of several hundred photographs, many of which have never been published. These photos draw you into the world of the soldiers. Frigid conditions, exhaustion, victory, defeat and death are all conveyed through the lenses of combat photographers from both sides of the battle….In addition to being an excellent addition to any military history buff's collection, this book will serve as a reminder of the overwhelming hardships faced by American soldiers one cold and dangerous winter 65 years ago.”
Review
BOOKIDEAS.COM
"Battle of the Bulge commemorates one of the pivotal events in World War II that marks the largest battle ever fought by the U.S. Army...Along with John Bruning's insightful and gripping text, twelve maps and over 416 black and white photos relive this decisive battle that took place over 65 years ago."
BIBLIO BUFFET
"In The Battle of the Bulge, John R. Bruning pays wonderful tribute to the American soldiers who fought and suffered and died during those fateful days in late 1944 and early 1945. Although Bruning tells the stories that compliment the photos, and while his writing could certainly stand alone, he places far greater emphasis on the images captured by combat photographers, often at great risk to their lives. That is as it should be . . . And the images that Bruning assembled in this coffee table book, more than 500 of them culled from the official US archives and the author’s personal collection, will not soon leave anyone who sees them. Many of the photographs are horrific. Others are inspiring. All of them are gripping . . . The Battle of the Bulge, however, is much more than a photo essay. It is a stunning reminder of the strength of spirit in the warrior and a tribute to soldiers everywhere who have faced terrible odds and prevailed."
Synopsis
A photographic history of the triumph of American arms against the vaunted Nazi war machine's desperate "all in" attack in one of history’s greatest battles.
Synopsis
Among the most famous battles that American forces fought in World War II, the Battle of the Bulge helped define the U.S. soldier in the Good War. The sheer scale of destruction--with almost as many American soldiers killed during the battle s 39 days as in all 80 days of the D-day and the ensuing Normandy campaign--continues to occupy military historians and veterans with endless speculation about what happened and what might have.
This photographic history recreates the triumph of American arms against the vaunted Nazi war machine's desperate "all in" attack--a victory that significantly shortened World War II in Europe and saved most of Western Europe from the Soviets. In harrowing images, the book revisits the only destruction of an American division in Europe in World War II--the 106th Infantry Division, which suffered almost all of its casualties in the first three days of the battle. It shows the air forces, armored forces, and infantry on both sides thrown into the Bulge nearly a million men in a meat grinder of terrible ferocity. Included is the most famous atrocity committed against Americans in Europe during the war: the Malmedy Massacre in a grim photographic record.
Battle of the Bulge is a brilliant pictorial account of one of the greatest battles of all time, this book is a lasting tribute and testament to American might in the fight against tyranny.
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Synopsis
About the Author
John R. Bruning has been a professional military historian and writer since 1990. He is the author of Crimson Sky: The Air Battle for Korea, Jungle Ace, Elusive Glory, Ship Strike Pacific, Luck of the Draw, and The Devil's Sandbox: With the 2nd Battalion, 162nd Infantry at War in Iraq. Bruning also has numerous articles, documentaries, multimedia CD-ROM programs, flight simulators, and museum displays to his credit.
Table of Contents
Contents
Preface
Introduction
Part I—The Reich’s Last Hope
Chapter One—Hitler’s Deadly Gamble
Chapter Two—Shoestrings and Bootstraps
Chapter Three—Mud and Pillboxes
Chapter Four—Watch on the Rhine
Part II—The North Shoulder
Chapter Five—John Buford’s Ghost
Chapter Six—The Checkerboards’ Stand
Chapter Seven—North Shoulder Blues
Chapter Eight—Where Medals of Honor Grew
Chapter Nine—The Panther Killers
Chapter Ten—Blue Spaders at the Hot Corner
Part III—The Center Fails
Chapter Eleven—A Noose for a War Criminal
Chapter Twelve—The Guardsmen and the SS
Part IV—Breakthrough
Chapter Thirteen—The Roads to Shönberg
Chapter Fourteen—Incident at Poteau
Chapter Fifteen—The Lucky Seventh
Chapter Sixteen—The Keystone of Skyline Drive
Chapter Seventeen—When the Odds Were Fifteen to One
Chapter Eighteen—Old Crock and Fritz
Chapter Nineteen—Roosevelt’s Highest-paid Butchers
Chapter Twenty—The Price of Over-caution
Bibliography
Index