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| Angriff | Turning Point |

Author: Jason D. Mark
Too often the visual aspect of the Stalingrad battle is portrayed using the same well-known images, and while most are no doubt stunning, their repeated use - with incorrect or misleading captions - adds nothing new to the record. Angriff:The German Attack on Stalingrad in Photos aims to rectify that. A rich cache of spectacular images is spread throughout collections across the globe. The photos used in this book have been gathered from a multitude of sources: military archives, photo libraries, museums, but most of all from private collections. The content of photos from these collections often portray the battle from the perspective of an individual soldier. Some of these photos certainly depict the stark reality of war but not every soldier saw action on the front-line. When all these private photos are combined, however, they form a montage and provide an insight into the lives of 6. Armee's soldiers. Furthermore, they often show periods of the battle that never fell within the viewfinder of a professional photographer. Every photo - including each famous image - has been painstakingly researched so that it is paired with a meaningful and accurate caption. In most cases, the location of the photo has been pinpointed, as has the date and unit depicted. This has enabled it to be placed in its correct historical, chronological and geographical context. While this process has cast a light on previously vague aspects of the battle, it has also debunked captions to many familiar images. If you want to see what Stalingrad was like from the German perspective, this book is for you.
Details:
Price: $89 USD. To be posted from Canada. $10 will be added to the bill for postage (it's a big book). If you are an international customer (outside of the US or Canada), then please inquire as to the shipping cost. Order here, if you want to do it the old-fashioned way.

Authors: P.P. Popov, A.V. Kozlov & B.G. Usik
Rarely do Westerners gain an understanding of
the Russian perspective of the battle. While a flurry of translated
memoirs by senior commanders like Zhukov and Chuikov in the 1960s
and 1970s provided a higher level point-of-view, very little has
been reported in English about how the fighting affected ordinary
Russian soldiers and civilians. Retired Colonel Anatoli
Venediktovich Kozlov, a participant in the battle and section
chairman of Volgograd city?s veterans? council, realised it was
imperative to record the accounts of the few remaining veterans
before time inevitably claimed them all. Glasnost has enabled these
veterans to provide a more candid account of their experiences than
if they had been interviewed during the Communist era. Kozlov?s wish
was for this book to be available to Westerners? and now it is.
The book is divided into two distinct parts, each describing a
different aspect of the Stalingrad battle. In Part 1, titled ?On the
Southern Approaches to Stalingrad?, Popov writes about a sector
often overshadowed by dramatic events further north. Long before the
Germans approached Stalingrad, tens of thousands of its citizens
were put to work erecting defences around the city and in doing so
endured unbelievable hardship. The southern district of
Krasnoarmeysk was soon struck by the full might of Hoth?s panzer
army in August 1942. Popov explores the district?s preparations,
defence and retribution in detail.
In Part 2, ?From Beyond the Don to the Volga?, Kozlov and Usik
explore the better known aspects of the battle by way of rivetting
first-hand accounts. It begins with the battle in the great bend of
the Don, an armoured clash in the hot dusty steppe which resulted in
Kozlov losing his entire tank unit. The fighting then moves into the
streets of Stalingrad and we discover how the brutal struggle was
viewed by Red Army soldiers and scores of civilians remaining in the
city. The book concludes with the victorious November
counteroffensive and eventual destruction of Paulus?s 6. Armee in
the Stalingrad pocket.
Russians are proud of their victory at Stalingrad, and justifiably
so, but only by reading the veterans? own words can this source of
pride even be begun to be comprehended.
Details:
Table of Contents:
Part One: On the Southern Approaches to Stalingrad
Chapter 1:
Everything for the Front! (page 2)
Chapter 2:
Not One Step Backward! (page 23)
Chapter 3:
Retribution (page 95)
Part Two: From Beyond the Don to the Volga
Chapter 4:
Battle in the Great Bend of the Don (page
146)
Chapter 5:
Defence of Stalingrad (page 171)
Chapter 6:
Stalingrad Cauldron (page 209)
Epilogue:
Lessons of the Battle (page 223)
Price: $42 USD. To be posted from Canada. $8 will be added to the bill for postage. If you are an international customer (outside of the US or Canada), then please inquire as to the shipping cost. Order here, if you want to do it the old-fashioned way.
Order both and save on postage!

