Vol. 35, No. 2
June 2005
MORE ON WORLD WAR II
The March 2001 issue of Talking Book News included an article that explored
books about the second World War, not including those that were primarily
about specific officers or battles. Since that time there has been an explosion
of new books about that period of time, so it’s time to revisit the
subject and see what’s new.
There are new books about the home front including Our Mothers’ War (RC58820),
which chronicles women from various backgrounds who filled nontraditional
roles during wartime, and The Home Front (RC51936), which portrays
young women working diligently for the war cause. The collection of articles
in Arizona Goes to War (AZC2651) shows Arizonans both on the front
lines and at home and the tremendous impact the war had on the state and
its future. Introductory sections were written and narrated by Senator
John McCain, State Historian Marshall Trimble and the book’s editor,
Brad Melton.
We have two new books about the covert war, Behind the Lines: the
Oral History of Special Operations in World War II (RC57309) by
Russell Miller and Operatives, Spies and Saboteurs (RC58126)
by Patrick K. O’ Donnell. There is also a book about the secret
development of radar technology and its use in the war, The Invention
That Changed the World (RC47888).
Secret codes were important to secure communication during the war and
we have three recent books about codes and code-making. One is Between
Silk and Cyanide (RC49964) by Leo Marks, a British cryptographer who
wittily describes how he devised a code issued on lightweight silk. Two
more books, Winds of Freedom (RC49954) and The Navajo Code
Talkers (RC55315), deal with the only code not deciphered by the enemy
and the experiences of the young men who developed and implemented the
code.
Many men and women who served in the military during the War have recently
published memoirs of their roles. Some of these are The Man Who Flew
the Memphis Belle (RC53956) by Robert Morgan, Beyond Valor (RC56806),
written by Ranger and Airborne veterans, The Forbidden Diary (RC48698),
whose author guided B-24 Liberator bombers over Europe, Into the Rising
Sun (RC55697) written by veterans of the Pacific theater, Always
Faithful (RC52468) a memoir penned by the former commander of the
Marines’ Third War Dog Platoon, and An Album ofMemories (RC52102),
a selection of letters Tom Brokaw received after publishing The Greatest
Generation Speaks (RC49312).
Books written by historians or journalists about this period are also
interesting and some of our more recent titles are The Wild Blue (RC52895)
by Stephen Ambrose, which describes B-24 bombing missions over Europe,
Bruce Gamble’s The Black Sheep (RC48259), subtitled The
Definitive Account of Marine Fighting Squadron 214 in World War II,
and Duty: A Father, His Son, and the Man Who Won the War (RC50894),
a book written by Bob Green based on interviews with the pilot who dropped
the atomic bomb on Hiroshima. There are also books by and about those who
survived persecution in Europe. All But My Life (AZC2591) was
written by Phoenix resident Gerda Weissman Klein who was fifteen years
old when war came to her native Poland. By the end of the war, she had
lost all of her family and survived three years of concentration camps
and a forced winter march, but her story is truly inspirational. Other
survival books are We Survived (RC57732), firsthand accounts of
those in the resistance, and Stolen Years (AZC2457), a personal
narrative of a teenage Basque girl who joined the French Resistance after
being forced out of her home by Nazi troops.
We’ll end with a few books that are less serious, including Unexplained
Mysteries of World War II (RC58268), which explores some of the
odd occurrences of the War, All This and World War II (AZC2534),
anecdotes about the war years the author spent as the American wife of
an Englishman and their post-war years in different countries around
the world, and A. E. Hotchner’s The Day I Fired Alan Ladd and
Other World War II Adventures (RC55675), the author’s light-hearted
reminiscence about his military service on the home front.
Let us know if you would like to read any of these books and we’ll
get them on their way to you. We can also provide a copy of the 2001 World
War II article that lists additional titles.