EXCELLENT
The War in Sicily and Italy, 1943-1944
The second book in the Liberation Trilogy
In the Pulitzer Prize-winning An Army at Dawn (EXCELLENT Mar/Apr
2003), Rick Atkinson examined the U.S. Army's triumphant march
across North Africa during World War II. The Day of Battle follows the
American army and their British allies--from the senior officers to the
common soldiers--as they invade Sicily in July 1943, drive the Germans
up the Italian peninsula, and engage in a costly campaign in the
"soft underbelly" of Europe. The Italian campaign, waged most
brutally at Salerno, Anzio, and Monte Cassino, produced an uncertain
outcome: while Allied losses were terrible, the battles relieved
pressure on Russian forces and seasoned the Allies. When Rome was
liberated on June 4, 1944, and D-Day began two days later, victory felt
inevitable.
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Henry Holt. 816 pages. $35. ISBN: 0805062890
Wall Street Journal
CLASSIC
"Mr. Atkinson's achievement is to marry prodigious
research with a superbly organized narrative and then to overlay the
whole with writing as powerful and elegant as any great narrative of
war. ... The reader's persistence will be richly rewarded at nearly
every turn, with an understanding of the Italian theater and the valor
of the men who fought there." TOM NAGORSKI
Dallas Morning News
EXCELLENT
"Amidst the avalanche [of World War II books], Rick
Atkinson's books stand out as superb. ... Unlike many other
newspaper journalists, Mr. Atkinson is comfortable in archives and
additional research venues that are normally the province of Ph.D.
historians." STEVE WEINBERG
Minneapolis Star Tribune
EXCELLENT
"Rather than choose between focusing on the strategy and the
generals or on the soldiers in the foxholes, Atkinson tries to have it
both ways--and he pulls it off. As in Army at Dawn, he combines an
impressive depth of research with a knack for taut, compelling
narrative, marred only by an occasional weakness for ten-dollar words
and a few overwrought passages that should have been reined in by an
editor." CASEY COMMON
New York Times
EXCELLENT
"[A] triumph of narrative history, elegantly written, thick
with unforgettable description and rooted in the sights and sounds of
battle. ... Mr. Atkinson presents the war as a clash not only of
impersonal forces but also of individual characters and wills, captured
deftly through interwoven snippets from letters, diaries, memoirs and
face-to-face encounters among the principal actors." WILIAM GRIMES
Washington Post
EXCELLENT
"It shoves sentimentality aside and shows us, plainly, how
unskilled the army was in 1943, its rawness and profligacy a perfect
reflection of an outraged and rapidly mobilized democracy. ... With this
book, Rick Atkinson cements his place among America's great popular
historians, in the tradition of Bruce Catton and Stephen Ambrose."
ROBERT KILEBREW
Miami Herald
EXCELLENT
"Rick Atkinson exhaustively chronicles a yearlong, bloody slog
that either contributed to overall victory or was a needless waste of
lives. ... Despite its criticism of the campaign, The Day of Battle
sides with military historians who argue that Churchill was right, the
pressure on the Normandy invaders was alleviated by the diversion of
German might to Italy." ARIEL GONZALEZ
USA Today
EXCELLENT
"The Day of Battle would be harder to read if Atkinson did not
leaven the war's horrors with its consolations: the beauty and
history of the countryside, the smell of its flowers, the taste of its
wines. And there are great characters. Gen. George Patton wades ashore
in Sicily with a Colt .45 Peacemaker on his hip, slapping a leather
swagger stick and yelling at soldiers to 'Get your asses off this
beach and go kill those Kraut bastards.'" RICK HAMPSON
NY Times Book Review
GOOD
"But while there is new material here--like information about
the deaths of Allied servicemen from American mustard gas at Bari--it is
his ability to ferret out astonishing amounts of detail and marshal it
into a highly readable whole that gives Atkinson the edge over most
writers in this field. ... Yet, this book is unashamedly a celebration
of the American experience in these campaigns, not that of the Allies as
a whole." JAMES HOLLAND
CRITICAL SUMMARY
The Day of Battle continues the story Rick Atkinson told in An Army
at Dawn; a future volume, about the Normandy invasion, will complete
Atkinson's Liberation Trilogy. Day of Battle, like Army at Dawn,
excels at presenting the complexities of war to a popular audience.
Notably, Atkinson puts a human face on the carnage with threedimensional
depictions of Churchill, FDR, and General Patton--as well as
lesser-known leaders and common soldiers. Exceptionally well researched
and compellingly written, the book offers gripping accounts of
high-level strategizing and on-the-ground fighting. A few critics cited
thin analyses of command decisions, a bias toward the Americans'
experience, and some florid writing. Overall, however, Day of Battle is
"a fitting testament to the GIs of the Fifth Army and the Italian
campaign" (Washington Post).
COPYRIGHT 2008 Bookmarks Publishing
LLC Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
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reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.