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Jerry Borrowman

Auteur de Three against Hitler

22 oeuvres 408 utilisateurs 18 critiques

Séries

Œuvres de Jerry Borrowman

Three against Hitler (1992) — Auteur — 74 exemplaires
Life and Death at Hoover Dam (2014) 56 exemplaires
Attack the Lusitania! (2011) 17 exemplaires
Home Again at Last (2008) 16 exemplaires
One Last Chance (2009) 15 exemplaires
Steamship to Zion (2012) 10 exemplaires
Assault on Cambriol (2014) 8 exemplaires

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What a remarkable job the author did in combining fact with fiction.
We are there as Pearl Harbor is attacked, and the loss of life, I could almost hear the bombs that were being dropped on the Island.
There are fictional people that we get to know and care about, and there is some truth to what happens to them, with some of it being wow moments.
While this is a WWII story and the Japanese attack on the US, it is also the USS Salt Lake City's story, and we follow this ships battles that help win the war.
This is a read that at times had me holding my breath, and page turning for the answers, the guns getting so hot they need to stop firing, and the miracles that happened!
Be sure to read the Author's Notes, and we learn the fate of the ship that help win the war!
I received this book through the Publisher Shadow Mountain, and was not required to give a positive review.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
alekee | Apr 13, 2024 |
In Why We Fought Jerry Borrowman collects seven stories of mostly non-combatant heroism during World War II. These stories feature spies, a movie star and USO performer who raised money for war bonds, a diplomat whose courage is credited with saving over 70,000 Jewish lives, captured French government officials, and two whole Army divisions made up of “ghosts”.

This is a relatively short book at 208 pages. Each of it's stories is self-contained and pretty well told. One minor criticism is that some of the stories are broken up by bios of the players involved. These bios are set off with bolded subtitles and tend to be overly long, with information not necessarily germane to the story at hand. I couldn’t figure out if Borrowman was padding each story or trying to keep it short by doing this. For me, these blocks of text interrupted the flow, and my enjoyment of the book.

Yet I did enjoy reading this book. It made for some relatively light reading on a couple of summer afternoons. It’s not a profound read, and I don’t think that’s the author’s intent. I think the primary audience for this book would be teenage readers who are just learning about the history of World War II and are interested in some inspirational or “human interest” stories.

As an aside - I often wonder why books are subtitled as they are because, for many of the books that I’ve read, the subtitles don’t actually explain or describe the content of the book. But in this case the subtitle “Inspiring Stories of Resisting Hitler and Defending Freedom” is spot on. It’s the title that seems a bit off. Borrowman does a great job taking us through the seven tales he tells, but he doesn’t delve too deeply into why the people involved did what they did, and he doesn’t try to find any commonality or overriding reason why they fought, nor relate it to a “We” that is not defined anywhere in the book.

Overall, for a summer read and a quick off-the-beaten-path World War II book I rate Why We Fought Three Stars ⭐⭐⭐.

NOTE: This is a review of an Advanced Reviewer’s Copy. This ARC of Why We Fought was provided by NetGalley and Shadow Mountain Publishing in exchange for a fair and unbiased review. This book will be generally available October 5, 2021.
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Signalé
stevesbookstuff | 1 autre critique | Sep 23, 2021 |
nonfiction, historical-figures, historical-places-events, historical-research, history-and-culture, Europe, Spain, Hungary, 20th-century, bravery, false-information, fake-troops, double-agent, human-rights, diplomat*****

Virginia Hall is the first person detailed and a determined woman who worked tirelessly for the British and American intelligence communities and the French Resistance fighters.
William Sebold became a double agent and, while very successful, sacrificed his health and sanity in the cause of defeating Hitler.
Marlene Dietrich was a surprise to me. The extravagant actress did a lot more than entertain the troops and was honored by both the US and England after the war.
Carl Lutz was a swiss diplomat in Hungary who secreted Jews and others scheduled for extinction in Hungary regardless of orders from his own country.
Ghost Army and other fantasies were perpetrated but a man who appeared to be a double agent but was really blowing smoke at the German high command. This Spaniard's name was Juan Pujol.
The last chapter contains even more people and heroes. Some of the information is new to me, but not that of Virginia Hall. The writing style is engaging and kept me riveted all afternoon.
Never forget. Never again.
I requested and received a free temporary ebook copy from Shadow Mountain Publishing via NetGalley. Thank you
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
jetangen4571 | 1 autre critique | May 6, 2021 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
22
Membres
408
Popularité
#59,622
Évaluation
3.8
Critiques
18
ISBN
55
Langues
1

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