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The Normandy Battlefields: Bocage and Breakout: from the Beaches to the Falaise Gap

Hardback

Main Details

Title The Normandy Battlefields: Bocage and Breakout: from the Beaches to the Falaise Gap
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Leo Marriott
By (author) Simon Forty
SeriesWWII Historic Battlefields
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:192
Dimensions(mm): Height 305,Width 229
Category/GenreSecond world war
ISBN/Barcode 9781612004198
ClassificationsDewey:940.5421421
Audience
Professional & Vocational
Illustrations 350 colour illus.

Publishing Details

Publisher Casemate Publishers
Imprint Casemate Publishers
Publication Date 31 March 2017
Publication Country United States

Description

The Normandy Battlefields: D-Day & the Bridgehead ended as the Allies fought to expand their D-Day foothold. In Bocage and Breakout, Leo Marriott and Simon Forty take the story forward as the success of the invasion continued into the Cotentin, with Cherbourg falling on 29 June, before it bogged down in face of determined German defense and the bocage countryside-innumerable small fields surrounded by hedgerows, each one hiding anti-tank weapons, mortars and machine guns. As US First Army fought its way south, on the eastern edges of the bridgehead, British and Canadian forces were fighting a war of attrition around Caen facing the bulk of the German armor as division after division was fed into Normandy. Like a pressure cooker, the fighting intensified until, seven weeks after D-Day, Operation `Cobra' broke the German line. Quickly Patton's Third Army, operational from 1 August, flooded through the gap exploiting the German confusion, encircling what was left of the German armies in the Falaise Pocket and advancing quickly through into Brittany. Three weeks later, the Battle of Normandy was over, the routed German Army-without most of its heavy weapons left in the Falaise Pocket or on the banks of the Seine-was retreating helter skelter back towards Germany and the Low Countries pursued by the Allies in a reverse of the 1940 Blitzkrieg campaign. The three months of war in June-July 1944 were brutal, with losses of front-line troops as heavy as in World War I. The German defense was tenacious, particularly in face of Allied air supremacy. The Allies struggled to get into a position to allow their more mobile forces room for maneuver and and the fighting was ferocious. When victory came, it came at a cost: 209,672 casualties among the ground forces, including 36,976 killed and 19,221 missing. The Allied air forces lost 16,714 airmen. The corresponding German losses were even more significant: some 450,000 men, of whom 240,000 were killed or wounded. More important to the Germans were the losses of heavy equipment-tanks, assault guns, artillery, personnel carriers. As an example, 12th SS Panzer Division had lost 94% of its armor, nearly all of its artillery and 70% of its vehicles. With c20,000 men and 150 tanks before the campaign, after Falaise it had 300 men and 10 tanks. Mixing text, maps and images, many of them specially commissioned including aerial photography, The Normandy Battlefields: Bocage and Breakout explains and interprets the complexities of the Normandy campaign in an original and cohesive package.

Author Biography

Leo Marriott is a retired Air Traffic Controller who has had more than thirty books published on his specialist subjects: naval warfare and aviation. He is an experienced pilot and accomplished aerial photographer, and his work is featured in this book. Simon Forty has been working in publishing as commissioning editor and author for 35 years. He has co-authored with Leo Marriott a series of books on the Normandy Campaign, including The Normandy Battlefields: D-Day & the Bridgehead (2014) and Hitler's Atlantic Wall (2016). A keen cyclist he has toured the Normandy battlefields many times.

Reviews

The text is well presented and the result is a most useful guidebook to visiting the inland battles of the Normandy Campaign, some of which are often overlooked. * Gun Mart * All those aerial shots and maps should be useful as reference for a more credible diorama bases...an excellent addition to your library. * DetailScaleView * Messrs Forty and Marriott provide a seriously entertaining look at events in Normandy from ground level and all points upwards using the perfect mix of facts and dates aligned to genuinely excellent archive and modern photography. I cannot fault this book and thoroughly recommend it. * War History Online * For the sheer volume of information both textual and visual, this book is excellent value for money...as a work of reference it is invaluable and is strongly recommended to students of the NW Europe campaign. * Casemate Journal - Fortress Study Group * Without doubt, this would be a most useful guide to have when touring the Normandy Battlefields, which it excels in explaining the complexities of the campaign, blow by blow, battle by battle. A must-read. * Britain at War Magazine * Essential reading for anyone with an interest in the military history of WW2 and specifically the D-Day landings. Amazing photographs and maps, this is a coffee table book you will not be able to put down! Marriott and Forty know their subject and share their expertise and knowledge in a way that's not been available in previous books about such a complex subject matter. * Books Monthly * This will appeal across a wide range of military tastes - the modeller, the military historian, the battlefield visitor, and the wargamer - and at a very fair price for a book of this calibre. * Miniature Wargames - Chris Jarvis * A very well presented, nicely designed and engaging book on a timeless subject; highly recommended. * Military Modelling Magazine *