A pacy compelling & penetrating account from Wolfson Prize-winning author Norman Stone that shows World War Two in a fresh new light. The Second World War is the nightmare that sits at the heart of the modern era
- a total refutation of any notion of human progress & a conflict which still haunts us seventy years on. Norman Stone's gripping new book aims to tell the narrative of the war in as brief a compass as possible making a sometimes familiar story utterly fresh & arresting. As with his highly acclaimed World War One: A Short History there is a compelling sense of a terrible story unfolding of a sceptical & humorous intelligence at work & a wish to convey to an audience who may well have no memory of the conflict just how high the stakes were. This is a beautifully written clever & imaginative attempt to convey what can almost not be conveyed. About the author: Norman Stone is one of Britain's greatest historians. His major works include The Eastern Front 1914-1917 (winner of the Wolfson Prize & published by Penguin) Europe Transformed & The Atlantic & Its Enemies (published by Penguin). He has taught at the universities of Cambridge Oxford & Bilkent where he is now Director of the Turkish-Russian Centre. He lives in Ankara. Reviews: Professor Norman Stone has achieved the impossible; he has somehow written a comprehensive history of the Second World War in just under 200 pages summarising the entire conflict while leaving out nothing of importance & bringing his lifetime of study of the subject to bear in a witty incisive & immensely readable way... Norman Stone has proved yet again that he is one of the most original witty & powerful British historians writing today". (Andrew Roberts Standpoint). " The joy & strength of this compact history besides its trenchancy & in the publishers' words the "sceptical & humorous intelligence at work" is its narrative clarity.. .a book to clear the mind after the grand tour of the big volumes". (Allan Mallinson The Times). " Novices will receive a painless introduction but educated readers should not pass up the highly opinionated prologue & epilogue & the author's trademark acerbic commentary throughout... Readers of all stripes.. .will find plenty to ponder". (Kirkus Reviews)."