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Alanbrooke War Diaries 1939-1945: Field Marshal Lord Alanbrooke
Paperback / softback
Main Details
Description
Alanbrooke was CIGS - Chief of the Imperial General Staff - for the greater part of the Second World War. He acted as mentor to Montgomery and military adviser to Churchill, with whom he clashed. As chairman of the Chiefs of Staff committee he also led for the British side in the bargaining and the brokering of the Grand Alliance, notably during the great conferences with Roosevelt and Stalin and their retinue at Casablanca,Teheran, Malta and elsewhere. As CIGS Alanbrooke was indispensable to the British and the Allied war effort. 'An essential tool for students of the war...It is also to the credit of the editors, Alex Danchev and Daniel Todman, that we see beyond the fascinatingly personal to the truly historical' Alan Judd, Sunday Telegraph
Author Biography
Alex Danchev is currently Professor of International Relations at Keele University. He has held fellowships at King's College, London, St Antony's College, Oxford and the Wilson Center in Washington DC.
ReviewsSuperb * SPECTATOR * These are almost certainly the last secrets to be unlocked about the British high command in World War II * DAILY MAIL * The Alanbrooke diaries chart a deeply troubled journey by a deeply moral man through the confusion and indecision of high command at the most difficult time in world history ... This is a marvellous book, one that finally honours a man who helped save European civilisation * IRISH TIMES * The diaries provide a fascinating daily snapshot of the direction of the greatest war in history by one of the key decision makers * SUNDAY TIMES * This welcome publication of [Alanbrooke's] unexpurgated diaries - earlier versions were censored - should make him more widely known ... an essential tool for students of the war ... It is also to the credit of the editors that we see beyond the fascinatingly personal to the truly historical * SUNDAY TELEGRAPH * Those who thought the major documents of the war against Hitler had already appeared must think again. For with the publication of the unvarnished text from the diaries of Field Marshal Lord Alanbrooke of Brookeborough, we can all focus more sharply on how high command in a great war works * THE TIMES *
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