Synopses & Reviews
In the course of the twentieth century, no war looms as profoundly transformative or as destructive as World War II. Its global scope and human toll reveal the true face of modern, industrialized warfare. Now, for the first time, we have a comprehensive, single-volume account of how and why this global conflict evolved as it did.
A War To Be Won is a unique and powerful operational history of the Second World War that tells the full story of battle on land, on sea, and in the air.
Williamson Murray and Allan R. Millett analyze the operations and tactics that defined the conduct of the war in both the European and Pacific Theaters. Moving between the war room and the battlefield, we see how strategies were crafted and revised, and how the multitudes of combat troops struggled to discharge their orders. The authors present incisive portraits of the military leaders, on both sides of the struggle, demonstrating the ambiguities they faced, the opportunities they took, and those they missed. Throughout, we see the relationship between the actual operations of the war and their political and moral implications.
A War To Be Won is the culmination of decades of research by two of America's premier military historians. It avoids a celebratory view of the war but preserves a profound respect for the problems the Allies faced and overcame as well as a realistic assessment of the Axis accomplishments and failures. It is the essential military history of World War II--from the Sino-Japanese War in 1937 to the surrender of Japan in 1945--for students, scholars, and general readers alike.
Review
The best synthesis of all of [the] new scholarship on WWII is, in my opinion, Williamson Murray and Allan Millett's superb comprehensive history of the war...There are a number of rather surprising assessments of individual commanders in the war...Anyone interested in this deadliest of all wars should consult this marvelous book. Herbert Kupferberg - Parade Magazine
Review
A magisterial, hypnotically detailed tactical narrative of WWII, with competing military, political, and social histories of the maelstrom writ large--yet comprehensibly presented...Coauthors Murray and Millett spent decades on their research, and the result is an essential plurality of understanding that allows them to consider the military strategies (and underlying realities) of the various Allied and Axis nations. Intentionally or otherwise, this book covers ground distinct from Stephen Ambrose's popular books, in that they focus much less on the personalized experiences of the soldier and more on the significant strategies, decisions, and movements of governments and generals (and the corresponding actions of the many individual naval, combat, and bomber units, and sundry partisan and espionage triumphs) that taken together, form the artificial patchwork of industrialized devastation we think of as the war. Surprisingly, this 'globalized' perspective does produce abstract or diffuse results, but allows the authors to present a nuanced panorama of scarce information and unique interpretation...Strongly written with the stern clarity of senior historians, this is a spellbinding history: the reader will hear the whine of the bombers and see the guttering lights of Europe, and find this rich assemblage of horror and destiny hard to set down. Louis Ray Sadler - Albuquerque Journal
Review
Military historians Williamson Murray and Allan R. Millett dissect tactics and operations of the war's major players in A War To Be Won...Unlike other volumes on WWII, many of which examine the soldiers' day-to-day life in the trenches, A War To Be Won focuses on the overall picture, the strategic successes and failures of the warring nations. John Erickson - Times Higher Education Supplement
Review
Military historians Williamson Murray and Allan R. Millett dissect tactics and operations of the war's major players in A War To Be Won...Unlike other volumes on WWII, many ofwhich examine the soldiers' day-to-day life in the trenches, A War To Be Wonfocuses on the overall picture, the strategic successes and failures of the warring nations.
Review
Two highly accomplished historians...collaborated to produce this magnificent one-volume history of World War II. While they do not neglect political or economic factors, what truly sets this work apart is their focus on 'the conduct of operations by the military organizations that waged the war.'...this is a riveting book that stimulates as much as it informs--and is a must read for any student of World War II or military professional. William W. Starr, Columbia State
Review
Without question A War To Be Won is the most compelling single volume history of the Second World War ever written. Murray and Millett are superb historians imbued with a trenchant gift for analysis, detachment and synthesis. A noble, grand, and sweeping achievement. Publishers Weekly
Review
A War to be Won, confined within a single volume, is a remarkable achievement deserving of the many plaudits it has received. It has a narrative deftness that will attract the general reader, operational analysis incisive and original enough to engage the specialist, technical evaluation and tactical appraisal of military effectiveness in abundance, though not without controversial, even acerbic comment where appropriate. Calvin L. Christman - Dallas Morning News
Review
Military historians Williamson Murray and Allan R. Millett dissect tactics and operations of the war's major players in A War To Be Won...Unlike other volumes on WWII, many of which examine the soldiers' day-to-day life in the trenches, A War To Be Wonfocuses on the overall picture, the strategic successes and failures of the warring nations.
Review
Scholarship and insight place this book in the front rank of military history written in the 20th century's final decade. The authors...make no secret of their convictions on personal, institutional and operational issues, but are nevertheless remarkably successful at avoiding the armchair debunking that mars so many histories of the period. Kirkus Reviews
Review
An excellent history of the Second World War, which offers a new and deeply illuminating view of why the major operations were launched and of the effectiveness with which they were conducted. The story is enriched by an original analysis of the ideas, ideological aims, technology, social consequences and international impact of the most intense conflict that the world has seen. A comprehensive, well-founded and enlightening single volume history. Douglas Brinkley, Director, The Eisenhower Center, University of New Orleans
Review
Murray and Millett have done an enormous service by providing a wonderful, one-volume history of the fighting of World War II. Those of us who fought the war must applaud them. It is a book for everyone, not just for the military history buff. I plan to tell my grandchildren that to understand World War II, the defining event of the Twentieth Century, and the generation that fought it, they must read this book. Robert O'Neill, Chichele Professor of the History of War, All Souls College, Oxford
Review
Amid the immense literature on the Second World War, it is remarkable that one niche has not hitherto been filled: a one-volume history focusing on military operations. This book remedies that omission and does so superbly, with accuracy and interpretive flair. There is nothing else quite like it. John W. Vessey, General, United States Army (retired), former Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff
Review
It is the most complete, balanced, and well-informed history of military operations now available. Max Hastings - Evening Standard -
Review
An outstanding single-volume history of [a] central moment...[The authors] write in a brisk, confident and knowledgeable style, often sprinkling their analyses with pithy irony, sardonic wit and sharp insights...Murray and Millett have produced a magnificent volume, one that will fascinate and enlighten both expert and layman alike. A War to Be Won now takes its place as the core volume in any library on the history of the Second World War, and it will likely remain so for years to come. Richard B. Frank - Naval History
Review
Most recent single-volume histories of the Second World War have been disappointing. It is a Herculean task to cover such a vast canvas of time and space. Authors wilt visibly under the strain. Here, however, is a work of exceptional quality from two distinguished American military historians...This book makes an important contribution to understanding both the military context and the nature of this vast global conflict. Russell F. Weigley, author of < i=""> The American Way of War: A History of United States Military Strategy and Policy <>
Review
Thousands of books have been published about World War II, but very few have possessed he level of scholarly perspective, encompassing scale and insightful detail to be found in this one. With its penetrating view of operational strategy on all sides during the war, it is among the finest of WWII studies and the best one-volume account of the military conflict I've ever read. Fred Slater - St. Joseph News-Press
Review
The West's eventual triumph is the subject of A War to Be Won, a comprehensive and highly readable history by two eminent and prolific military historians. Williamson Murray and Allan Millet focus on operations but range far and wide into politics, strategy, military doctrines (why armies fight the way they do), weapons, science and tactics, from the bumbling politics of the 30's to the Cold War...This is edgy, though expert, history. The ordeal of the Soviet war against Germany is dramatically and vividly told, as is the pillage and rape that Red Army soldiers inflicted on prisoners and civilians within reach. Robert Killebrew
Review
World War II is fast slipping from memory. So it takes a book, such as A War To Be Won...to make one realize the horror of that conflict...In this comprehensive history of the military aspect of World War II...[the authors] provide a broad view of the two-hemisphere tragedy. Washington Post
Review
In A War To Be Won: Fighting the Second World War, Williamson Murray and Allan Millett have...eschewed grand strategy for what they describe as operational history. They have plugged a large gap...They combine firm and fresh judgments with common humanity; and they achieve balance not only between the theaters of war but also between themselves. Murray knows about Germany, Britain and air power, Millett about the United States and its armed forces. If they divided their subject matter accordingly, the seams are never evident. This is an outstanding history of the war. John Erickson - Times Higher Education Supplement
Review
While...several volumes present admirably comprehensive panoramas of the second world war, the very nature of this approach precludes close operational analysis as opposed to general operational narrative. This is the gap that A War To Be Won fills--an operational history of the 1939-1945 war focusing on military operations, with dispassionate discussion of military effectiveness whether involving the Allies or the Axis...A War To Be Won, confined within a single volume, is a remarkable achievement deserving of the many plaudits it has received. It has a narrative deftness that will attract the general reader, operational analysis incisive and original enough to engage the specialist, technical evaluation and tactical appraisal of military effectiveness in abundance, though not without controversial, even acerbic comment where appropriate. Hew Strachan - Times Literary Supplement
Review
[Murray and Millett] are military historians but take an extraordinarily broad view of the conflict [of World War II]--its political and economic origins, its diplomatic maneuvering, its strategic designs and its human toll, but above all its combat. In 600-plus pages, they zero in on the troops who did the fighting and the commanders who led--and sometimes misled--them...The writing is brisk and lively, the revelations sometimes startling, and the selection of photographs generous and revealing. This is as masterful and readable a one-volume history of the Second World War as anyone is likely to write. Dick Kreck - Denver Post
Description
Includes bibliographical references (p. 613-637) and index.
About the Author
Williamson Murrayis Senior Fellow at the <>Institute for Defense Analysis, Washington, D.C.Allan R. Millettis General Raymond E. Mason, Jr. Professor of Military History at <>The Ohio StateUniversity.
Table of Contents
1. Origins of a Catastrophe
2. The Revolution in Military Operations, 1919-1939
3. German Designs, 1939-1940
4. Germany Triumphant, 1940
5. Diversions in the Mediterranean and Balkans, 1940-1941
6. Barbarossa, 1941
7. The Origins of the Asia-Pacific War, 1919-1941
8. The Japanese War of Conquest, 1941-1942
9. The Asia-Pacific War, 1942-1944
10. The Battle of the Atlantic, 1939-1943
11. Year of Decision for Germany, 1942
12. The Combined Bomber Offensive, 1941—1945
13. The Destruction of Japanese Naval Power, 1943-1944
14. The Killing Time, 1943-1944
15. The Invasion of France, 1944
16. The End in Europe, 1944-1945
17. The Destruction of the Japanese Empire, 1944-1945
18. The End of the Asia-Pacific War, 1945
19. Peoples at War, 1937-1945
20. The Aftermath of War
Epilogue: In Retrospect
Appendixes
1. Military Organization
2. The Conduct of War
3. Weapons
4. Exploring World War II
Notes
Suggested Reading
Acknowledgments
Illustration Credits
Index