Cantitate/Preț
Produs

The Second World War

Autor Antony Beevor
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 24 apr 2025
'Simply the ultimate Second World War history'- SIMON SEBAG MONTEFIORE, DAILY TELEGRAPH

A CONFLICT LIKE NO OTHER, it has come to define the very idea of war itself. Great power rivalry prepared the ground, yet so did bitter ethnic disputes following the collapse of four empires, as did the ideological clash between Fascism and Communism. More than any other, the Second World War was dominated, in the age of totalitarianism, by leaders who determined the course of events in a way we have not seen since then - and thought we would never see again.

Using the most up-to-date scholarship and research, Antony Beevor assembles the whole picture in a gripping narrative that extends from the North Atlantic to the South Pacific and from the snowbound steppe to the North African Desert. Despite the titanic scale of his canvas, he never loses sight of the fates of the ordinary men and women whose lives were scattered by inexorable forces.

Revised and with a new foreword to commemorate the 80th anniversary of VE Day, this is the unrivalled single-volume history of the greatest conflict the world has ever known, by our foremost historian of war.
Citește tot Restrânge

Toate formatele și edițiile

Toate formatele și edițiile Preț Express
Paperback (2) 10203 lei  3-5 săpt. +6883 lei  5-11 zile
  Orion Publishing Group – 24 apr 2025 10203 lei  3-5 săpt. +6883 lei  5-11 zile
  Little, Brown and Company – 7 mai 2013 17413 lei  3-5 săpt.

Preț: 10203 lei

Preț vechi: 13522 lei
-25%

Puncte Express: 153

Preț estimativ în valută:
1806 2103$ 1569£

Carte disponibilă

Livrare economică 02-16 februarie
Livrare express 17-23 ianuarie pentru 7882 lei

Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76

Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781399629713
ISBN-10: 1399629719
Pagini: 1040
Dimensiuni: 128 x 198 x 64 mm
Greutate: 0.8 kg
Editura: Orion Publishing Group
Colecția W&N
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Recenzii

His singular ability to make huge historical events accessible to a general audience recalls the golden age of British narrative history, whose giants include Gibbon, Macaulay and Carlyle
Beevor can be credited with single-handedly transforming the reputation of military history
The myriad pieces of this intricate kaleidoscope are pieced together with exemplary skill ... This is a splendid book, erudite, with an admirable clarity of thought and expression
His accounts of the key moments in the Second World War have a sense of colour, drama and immediacy that few narrative historians can match
You feel yourself being carried along on the narrative flow, channelled this way and that through the pools and rapids by Beevor's expert helmanship
Brocaded with details of the great campaigns and thoughtful explanations of Hitler's murderous belligerence, The Second World War is an absorbing, unsparingly lucid work of military history
Beevor's book is a pleasure to read and an example of intelligent, lively historical writing at its best
This is as comprehensive and objective an account of the course of the war as we are likely to get, and the most humanly moving to date
A British historian of great distinction and range, who ... demonstrates his mastery of his sources
A magnificent performance - true excitement from one page to the next delivered in faultless prose
Beevor is excellent at catching the individual in the flood-tide of events
The book could not really have been done better
If you want to understand the war as military struggle, this book is all you really need. However well you thought you knew the subject, you will learn something new on every page.
A truly outstanding historian of war
Everyone who is interested in the Second World War should read this book.
The book that Beevor has been building towards writing - and everybody else has been anticipating reading.
remarkably well-written and informative
This is the place to begin if you need to get your knowledge of the war in order.
This is history writ large.
the whole story told in the author's usual erudite yet highly readable prose
The heart of Beevor's appeal is precisely that straightforward narrative approach, coupled with his lively, engaging style and his use of memorable, almost cinematic, set-pieces.
He is the most humanitarian of historians, and covers huge sweeps of history through the real stories of the individuals who experienced them. Reading this will be like having him walk me through the history of the war like a personal guide.
This is a book demanding to be read.
a masterly understanding of the conflict's many facets
For as harrowing and politically convoluted as the years 1939-1945 were, Beevor writes with such a panache and literary flair, that the reader is almost uncannily charged to keep turning the pages at a rate of ten by ten, twenty by twenty, chapter by chapter - until such point that s/he has stumbled upon the end as if by chance, as if by default.
By deploying his keen eye for tiny detail and penchant for story telling, and then marrying them both with an acute historical investigation, Antony Beevor has once again written a book that is simply superlative.
This imposing history can both be read as a whole or dipped into, and never fails to inform.
This book is a perfect mixture of world history and human experience, unbiased and highly readable.
As we have come to expect from this master, he excels at using eye-witness testimony to illustrate how mankind can be capable of both terrible cruelty and astonishing courage.
global history at its grandest and best
the most incredibly detailed research
a truly rewarding account of the global conflict. Beevor has a special gift for linking great events with individual testimony
In his books on Stalingrad and Berlin, Beevor used evidence from ordinary people to bring home the reality of life at the front as opposed to the traditional HQ view... He crams in so much and does it so well because he can.

Notă biografică

Antony Beevor served as a regular officer in the 11th Hussars in Germany. He is the author of Crete-The Battle and the Resistance, which won a Runciman Prize, Paris After the Liberation, 1944-1949 (written with his wife Artemis Cooper), Stalingrad, which won the Samuel Johnson Prize, the Wolfson Prize for History and the Hawthornden Prize for Literature, Berlin-The Downfall, which received the first Longman-History Today Trustees' Award, The Mystery of Olga Chekhova and, most recently, the bestseller, D-Day. He lives in London.