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Marc Milner on Second Front

Marc Milner on Second Front

Marc Milner discusses the overlooked truths of D-Day and the twenty-year journey that led to Second Front.
Marc Milner

Marc, many congrats on the new book. It seems this is a book a long time coming – at least for me since Saving Private Ryan so outrageously dismissed British and Canadian efforts on D-Day. What was your motivation to write the book? Two primary motives, as outlined in...

AoH Book Club: Roger Moorhouse on Killing Hitler

AoH Book Club: Roger Moorhouse on Killing Hitler

With the 80th anniversary of the July Plot having recently taken place, Roger Moorhouse returns to discuss his book, Killing Hitler, an account of the plots to kill the Nazi leader. He met with our editor to talk Georg Elser and Claus von Stauffenberg.

AoH Book Club: Roger Moorhouse on Killing Hitler How many plots were there against Hitler? A book came out a long time ago that talked about 42 plots against Hitler. That book didn't even include some of the ones that I talked about. I talk about 15. They vary in...

War, Empire and the Struggle for a New World

War, Empire and the Struggle for a New World

Bestselling author and award-winning film-maker Phil Craig explains why he felt compelled to tackle the historical forces at play in his new globe-crossing examination of the final year of World War Two.

Not every distinguished historian announces his arrival by the roar of a V8 engine, but Robin Prior is no ordinary historian and - for me at least - this was to be no ordinary lunch. I was planning a new book, the final volume in my Finest Hour trilogy about Britain...

A Death in Berlin, by Simon Scarrow

A Death in Berlin, by Simon Scarrow

The third instalment of Simon Scarrow’s excellent Berlin Noir series is a pacey and compelling novel.

A Death in Berlin is the third instalment of Simon Scarrow’s excellent Berlin Noir series featuring Criminal Inspector Horst Schenke. A former racing car driver turned police detective. It’s May 1940, the Second World War is less than a year old and its all quiet on...

Naples 1944: War, Liberation and Chaos, by Keith Lowe

Naples 1944: War, Liberation and Chaos, by Keith Lowe

This magnificent book traces the story of people in Naples, 1944, making it compelling and difficult to put down.

Keith Lowe has built a well-deserved reputation in recent years as a chronicler of the interface between military operations and civil society, especially once the fighting on a battlefield has ended. For instance, his ‘Savage Continent’ tracked the long, wearying...

SAS Great Escapes Three, by Damien Lewis

SAS Great Escapes Three, by Damien Lewis

Damien Lewis's third SAS World War II escape instalment blends painstaking research with firsthand accounts that let the men tell their stories.

Damien Lewis's third instalment of his SAS 'greatest escapes of World War II series is a corker. It has all the elements Lewis 'readers have come to expect, painstaking research carefully blended with firsthand accounts that allow the men concerned to tell their...

The Stalin Affair: The Impossible Alliance that Won the War, by Giles Milton

The Stalin Affair: The Impossible Alliance that Won the War, by Giles Milton

Giles Milton's latest and eminently readable book is full of a cast of sometimes larger-than-life characters.

The Stalin Affair: The Impossible Alliance that Won the War   What British diplomat earned his place in history by penning a note to his superior in London commenting mischievously on the name of his Turkish counterpart, Mustapha Kunt? You've guessed it:...

Who Will Rescue Us?

Who Will Rescue Us?

The story of the Jewish children who fled to France and America during the Holocaust
Laura Hobson Faure

My recent book Who Will Rescue Us? represents over ten years of historical research on a group of primarily Jewish children who fled Nazi Germany and Austria. The goals of my study were multiple: I wanted to grasp- to the extent possible- what it felt like to be a...

Lest We Forget, by Tessa Dunlop

Lest We Forget, by Tessa Dunlop

A compelling examination of war and peace written with great skill and poignancy.

In the introduction to Lest We Forget, Tessa Dunlop writes: “Monuments and statues are inanimate, static entities that depend on their relationship with human beings for relevance and agency.” This statement goes to the heart of this brilliant book. Each monument is...