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AUTHOR: Le Tissier, T
FORMAT: 288pp 234x156 Pb
An impressively detailed account of the Nazi-Soviet battles that
culminated in 1945 with the last major land battle in Europe - one that proved
decisive for the fate of Berlin and the Third Reich. In the dying months of the
Second World War on 31st January 1945, the first Red Army troops reached the
River Oder, barely forty miles from Berlin. Everyone at Soviet Headquarters
expected Marshal Zhukov’s troops quickly to bring the war to an end. But despite
bitter fighting by both sides, a bloody stalemate persisted for two months. At
the end of this time the Soviet bridgeheads north and south of Kustrin were
eventually united, and the Nazi fortress finally fell. Tony Le Tissier has
written an impressively detailed account of the Nazi-Soviet battles in the
Oderbruch and for the Seelow Heights, east of Berlin. They culminated in 1945
with the last major land battle in Europe that proved decisive for the fate of
Berlin - and the Third Reich. Drawing on official sources and the personal
accounts of soldiers from both sides who were involved, Le Tissier has
meticulously reconstructed the Soviets’ difficult breakthrough on the Oder: the
establishment of bridgeheads, the battle for the fortress of Kustrin, and the
bloody fight for the Seelow Heights. Numerous maps help the reader follow the
ebb and flow of battle, and a selection of archive photographs paint a sobering
picture of the final death throes of Hitler’s Thousand-Year Reich.
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