Synopses & Reviews
Ten days before the largest operation of World War II was launched, it was still one of the centurys best-kept secretsthanks to countless ordinary people participating in one of historys most remarkable moments. David Stafford has written a riveting account of ten of those ordinary men and womenincluding an American paratrooper, a German soldier, a nineteen-year-old English woman working on secret codes, a Parisian Jew in hiding, and a daring French resistance cellas they lived through ten very extraordinary days. Drawing on previously unpublished diaries and letters, Stafford gives readers a fresh point of entry into one of the most significant battles ever fought.Ten Days to D-Day buzzes with the pace of a novel, as Stafford moves from country to country, from character to character, including some of D-Days leaders: Hitler, Rommel, Eisenhower, and Churchill. Stafford compellingly brings to life the final days before the invasion through the eyes of its participants, the citizens and soldiers that made history on June 6, 1944.
Synopsis
- David Stafford is a leading historian, and this book will receive major press attention.- The publication date will coincide with the premiere of a History Channel special on D-Day, for which the author has been interviewed extensively.- In the freshest look at D-Day in decades, Stafford brings to life the preparations for history's most formidable invasion through the eyes of the ground-level participants, rather than by retreading the much-dissected actions of heads of state.
Synopsis
"Ten days before the largest operation of World War II was launched, it was still one of the centurys best-kept secretsthanks to countless ordinary people participating in one of historys most remar"
About the Author
David Stafford is an expert in Britain's wartime intelligence operations and the author of numerous books, among them Spies Beneath Berlin, Churchill and Secret Service and Roosevelt and Churchill, which was a selection of the Book-of-the-Month Club. A former diplomat who has written extensively on intelligence history, he is currently Project Director at the Centre for Second World War Studies at the University of Edinburgh, Scotland.