Endgame, 1945 The missing final chapter of World War II

David Stafford

Book - 2007

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2nd Floor 940.5421/Stafford Due Dec 3, 2024
Subjects
Published
New York, NY : Little, Brown 2007.
Language
English
Main Author
David Stafford (-)
Edition
1st American ed
Item Description
First published in Great Britain by Little, Brown Book Group, 2007.
Physical Description
xix, 581 p., [16] p. of plates : ill., maps
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (p. [527]-568) and index.
ISBN
9780316109802
  • Introduction
  • Maps
  • Part 1. Friday, 20 April 1945
  • 1. Cruel Spring
  • 2. "Sorrow and Darkness"
  • 3. Avenging Justice
  • 4. "A Curious Pearly Color"
  • 5. "To Fall Heroically"
  • 6. "Ich War Immer Dagegen"
  • Part 2. 20-30 April 1945
  • 7. "A Sort of Alice in Wonderland Air"
  • 8. "The Most Degenerate Spectacle"
  • 9. Death of a Dictator
  • 10. Himmler's Bid
  • 11. "Boulevard of Broken Dreams"
  • 12. Alpine Refuge
  • 13. "Death Fled"
  • 14. "The Bitterest Battle"
  • Part 3. Hitler's Death to VE Day
  • 15. Dealing with Nazis
  • 16. The Cap Arcona
  • 17. "The Dead-End of Hitler's Reich"
  • 18. Hitler's Loot
  • 19. "The Dawn Has Broken through at Last"
  • Part 4. VE Day to Potsdam
  • 20. VE Day
  • 21. "Fortune Is Not Always Joy"
  • 22. "A Grotesque Comedy"
  • 23. "An Iron Curtain"
  • 24. "You Lost People as You Gained Your Freedom"
  • 25. Berlin: The Gray City
  • 26. Monday, 16 July 1945
  • 27. "Other Beasts in Other Lairs"
  • Epilogue: What Happened to Them?
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

The formal German surrender on May 8, 1945, did not end the violence and suffering in Europe. Sporadic fighting continued against diehard Axis units for several weeks, and the ordeal for civilians, forced laborers, concentration-camp inmates, and countless displaced persons continued. Stafford, who has written extensively on military intelligence, seamlessly interweaves the personal experiences of several participants with the broader conflict over a three-month period from April to July 1945. A 20-year-old Ohio native recalls the discouraging slog through Italy against well-entrenched German forces as he worries about dying in a war that seems over. A British commando describes the merciless reprisals some in his unit take against surrendering German soldiers. A Canadian officer in liberated Holland observes the abuse handed out to supposed Nazi sympathizers. There are stark images here, including the horror of Allied solders as they liberate Buchenwald; other images seem almost farcical, as some fleeing top Nazis are captured through blind luck. This is a riveting and powerful account of the winding down of a worldwide conflagration.--Freeman, Jay Copyright 2007 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Hitler's death did not end the war in Europe in 1945. Instead, as diplomat-historian Stafford (Ten Days to D-Day: Citizens and Soldiers on the Eve of the Invasion, 2004, etc.) writes, the fighting dragged on for three more momentous months, during which Europe was reshaped. That quarter-year has not exactly been overlooked. The closing pages of Stephen E. Ambrose's Band of Brothers, for instance, find its paratrooper protagonists in western Austria, where, as Stafford notes, it was feared that the remnants of the Nazi state would attempt to regroup for a last stand in the mountainous redoubt. That prospect, surmises the author, contributed to Eisenhower's decision not to race to Berlin but instead to stop the Western Allies's advance at the Elbe River and cede the land east of it to the Soviets, even though Churchill was strongly agitating to "capture Berlin and use it as a bargaining tool with the Soviet leader." Even in the desperate days before Hitler's suicide, German soldiers were offering stiff resistance. In its wake, strong German resistance continued until the government of Admiral Doenitz finally agreed to unconditional surrender, having offered to make peace with the West under the condition that Germany be allowed to continue fighting against the Soviet Union. Eisenhower did keep the lines open for two days to allow German units an escape route to the west, and, writes Stafford, "thanks to Doenitz's delaying tactics, almost two million German soldiers were able to avoid Soviet captivity." With that surrender, the Allies now had the task of imposing occupation rule on Germany, quashing any last efforts at armed resistance and cleaning up a horrific mess while attending to millions of displaced, starving persons--a story that stretches well beyond July 1945, but one that Stafford capably outlines. Drawing on the memoirs of participants--from Nazi test pilots to concentration-camp inmates--and on an impressive body of historical work, Stafford delivers a useful survey of a transformative time. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.