Eighth Army

Author(s): Robin Neillands

Non-Fiction

From June 1940 to October 1942, Eighth Army was the only Western army facing and fighting the Axis powers, Italian as well as German, on the battlefield. Eighth Army was a British army but represented the Free World at war. Some of the great fighting divisions of the War were part of it – the 9th Australian, the 2nd New Zealand, 1st South African, 4th Indian, 51st Highland and 7th Armoured – the famous Desert Rats – joined by the Free French, the Greek Brigade, and many more from Britain and around the world. Though ultimately triumphant, the Army was not always victorious – it had to fight obsolete equipment, indifferent command and excessive demands as well as the enemy – not forgetting its most admired foe, Rommel, who met his match in Eighth Army’s General Sir Bernard Montgomery – Monty. This book is built on the memories of Eighth Army veterans, collected from all over the world. It includes personal accounts of the battles fought at Sidi Rezegh, Alamein, in Sicily and at Cassino – and all the way to the Gothic Line, the end of Eighth Army’s 3,000-mile march to victory. It is a story that deserves to be told, about an army that deserves to be remembered.

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'This is a touching book of valour and victory. And its might comes from allowing us to make our own opinions of war, reading it as the exciting account that it is. This is quite simply a book in a million' -- Bangor Chronicle 'A fitting tribute to bravery' -- Good Book Guide 'Meticulously researched' -- Contemporary Review 'A splendid book' -- Western Daily Press 20040110 'Well respected as a military historian, Neillands tells an absorbing story ! he can take great pride in the end result of his labours' -- Liverpool Daily Post 20040109 Engrossing ... the story of Eighth Army is a fascintating one and Neillands tells it with verve and style' -- Living History 20040109 'A fine account' -- Military Illustrated 20040109

Robin Neillands is 'one of Britain's most readable military historians' (Birmingham Post) and the author of several widely acclaimed books on the First and Second World Wars, including The Battle of Normandy, 1944; The Great War Generals on the Western Front and The Conquest of the Reich. His most recent, The Bomber War, Major General Julian Thompson called 'a compelling and very moving account'. Of the same book Blake Morrison wrote 'rarely has oral history been put to better use'. He lives in Wiltshire.

General Fields

  • : 9780719556425
  • : murray
  • : murray
  • : 0.892
  • : 05 January 2004
  • : 242mm X 160mm X 43mm
  • : United Kingdom
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : Robin Neillands
  • : Hardback
  • : 940.541241
  • : 480
  • : 16 illustrations, maps, diagrams