The Steel Wave: A Novel of World War II
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Booklist Review
This is the second volume of Shaara's planned trilogy of novels dealing with America's role in World War II in Europe. Here Shaara's topic is D-Day, the Allied effort to begin the liberation of Nazi-occupied Europe by amphibious landings on the coast of Normandy. With decades of hindsight, the success of the Normandy invasion may seem inevitable and a tribute to Allied forces. As Shaara's fine novel illustrates, however, success was far from assured, and the planning fell short in numerous ways. Paratroopers missed their drop sites by miles; air cover for the debarking troops was sporadic; and units became quickly separated on the beaches. On the German side, similar confusion reigned. Although this is technically a work of fiction, Shaara again relies on actual historical figures to tell his story, including Generals Eisenhower, Bradley, Rommel, and von Rundstedt. Although the dialogue is invented, Shaara knows the men and the material so their thoughts and conversations are credible. In the end, it appears, Allied success was due to the actions of hundreds of ordinary soldiers, who combined courage with the ability to improvise when the best laid plans broke down, as they so often do in war.--Freeman, Jay Copyright 2008 Booklist
Publisher's Weekly Review
This keystone of the bestselling WWII trilogy dramatizes D-Day and ups the bar for military historicals, demonstrating that Shaara (The Rising Tide) has hit full stride. The epic-scale novel opens on January 25, 1944, with British commandos gathering soil samples on Omaha Beach to assess landing sites. Shaara gives the Americans, called "the great waves of steel" by the Germans, their due portion in the grisly, brutal Allied invasion, and the experiences of the grunt soldiers--most notably the indefatigable U.S. Army Sgt. Jesse Adams--offers a field-level view of D-Day and afterward, generating more suspenseful reading than the matter-of-fact accounts of the big-brass dealings of Eisenhower and Churchill. The Allied leaders' personalities emerge with agile clarity, while German Field Marshal Erwin Rommel embodies "the good soldier" laboring under a delusional Hitler and German High Command ensconced in cozy Berlin. Rommel's ambivalent complicity in the assassination plot on Hitler is convincingly rendered and paves the way for the final act. The muscular prose, deft sense of military drama and relentless pacing are well suited for this crackerjack saga. (May) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Library Journal Review
Shaara's second entry in his World War II trilogy (after The Rising Tide) is a magnificent and epic telling of the terrible days of the D-day invasion in June 1944. As before, Shaara effectively uses the technique of adding thoughts, dialog, and intense action to flesh out the real historical characters and events of D-day. The author lets readers share the doubts, hopes, frustrations, and fears of both the great leaders and the ordinary soldiers who have to carry out what the great ones have planned. Nor does he ignore the political implications of each nation's actions, which sometimes caused tragic miscalculations on both sides. There is no sugarcoating the horrors of war; nobody is spared. Shaara portrays his characters as human and fully capable of pettiness and making bloody mistakes and committing atrocities. Intense, compelling, and thoroughly researched, this is much more than just an excellent historical novel. Highly recommended for all fiction collections.--Robert Conroy, Warren, MI (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Booklist Reviews
This is the second volume of Shaara's planned trilogy of novels dealing with America's role in World War II in Europe. Here Shaara's topic is D-Day, the Allied effort to begin the liberation of Nazi-occupied Europe by amphibious landings on the coast of Normandy. With decades of hindsight, the success of the Normandy invasion may seem inevitable and a tribute to Allied forces. As Shaara's fine novel illustrates, however, success was far from assured, and the planning fell short in numerous ways. Paratroopers missed their drop sites by miles; air cover for the debarking troops was sporadic; and units became quickly separated on the beaches. On the German side, similar confusion reigned. Although this is technically a work of fiction, Shaara again relies on actual historical figures to tell his story, including Generals Eisenhower, Bradley, Rommel, and von Rundstedt. Although the dialogue is invented, Shaara knows the men and the material so their thoughts and conversations are credible. In the end, it appears, Allied success was due to the actions of hundreds of ordinary soldiers, who combined courage with the ability to improvise when the best laid plans broke down, as they so often do in war. Copyright 2008 Booklist Reviews.
Library Journal Reviews
Shaara's second entry in his World War II trilogy (after The Rising Tide ) is a magnificent and epic telling of the terrible days of the D-day invasion in June 1944. As before, Shaara effectively uses the technique of adding thoughts, dialog, and intense action to flesh out the real historical characters and events of D-day. The author lets readers share the doubts, hopes, frustrations, and fears of both the great leaders and the ordinary soldiers who have to carry out what the great ones have planned. Nor does he ignore the political implications of each nation's actions, which sometimes caused tragic miscalculations on both sides. There is no sugarcoating the horrors of war; nobody is spared. Shaara portrays his characters as human and fully capable of pettiness and making bloody mistakes and committing atrocities. Intense, compelling, and thoroughly researched, this is much more than just an excellent historical novel. Highly recommended for all fiction collections.—Robert Conroy, Warren, MI
[Page 96]. Copyright 2008 Reed Business Information.Publishers Weekly Reviews
This keystone of the bestselling WWII trilogy dramatizes D-Day and ups the bar for military historicals, demonstrating that Shaara (The Rising Tide ) has hit full stride. The epic-scale novel opens on January 25, 1944, with British commandos gathering soil samples on Omaha Beach to assess landing sites. Shaara gives the Americans, called "the great waves of steel" by the Germans, their due portion in the grisly, brutal Allied invasion, and the experiences of the grunt soldiers—most notably the indefatigable U.S. Army Sgt. Jesse Adams—offers a field-level view of D-Day and afterward, generating more suspenseful reading than the matter-of-fact accounts of the big-brass dealings of Eisenhower and Churchill. The Allied leaders' personalities emerge with agile clarity, while German Field Marshal Erwin Rommel embodies "the good soldier" laboring under a delusional Hitler and German High Command ensconced in cozy Berlin. Rommel's ambivalent complicity in the assassination plot on Hitler is convincingly rendered and paves the way for the final act. The muscular prose, deft sense of military drama and relentless pacing are well suited for this crackerjack saga. (May)
[Page 39]. Copyright 2008 Reed Business Information.Reviews from GoodReads
Citations
Shaara, J., & Michael, P. (2008). The Steel Wave: A Novel of World War II (Unabridged). Books on Tape.
Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Shaara, Jeff and Paul Michael. 2008. The Steel Wave: A Novel of World War II. Books on Tape.
Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Shaara, Jeff and Paul Michael. The Steel Wave: A Novel of World War II Books on Tape, 2008.
Harvard Citation (style guide)Shaara, J. and Michael, P. (2008). The steel wave: a novel of world war II. Unabridged Books on Tape.
MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)Shaara, Jeff, and Paul Michael. The Steel Wave: A Novel of World War II Unabridged, Books on Tape, 2008.
Copy Details
Collection | Owned | Available | Number of Holds |
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Libby | 1 | 1 | 0 |