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The Second World War : an Illustrated History

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Read but complete with no missing, loose or damaged pages. Original binding is intact and complete. Includes original dust jacket. Original dust jacket has some damage on the front and rear.

240 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1975

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About the author

A.J.P. Taylor

117 books210 followers
Alan John Percivale Taylor was an English historian of the 20th century and renowned academic who became well known to millions through his popular television lectures.

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Abdullah Hussaini.
Author 23 books80 followers
March 8, 2023
Not as good as The First World War but still can be considered as an overview of WW2. Although the writing appears drier than First WW but one cannot neglect this as still a good overview of WW2.
Profile Image for Last Chance Saloon.
900 reviews16 followers
March 15, 2026
Very well written overview of WWII, with some interesting photographs and paintings. AJP Taylor had definite ideas on the origins and the continuance of the war, which are only lightly suggested in this edition. But I would recommend this as a good historical introduction.
This was published in 1975.
Profile Image for Matin  Pyron.
457 reviews16 followers
March 6, 2023
کتاب خیلی مفید و کوتاهی بودش با وجود اینکه ۴۱۲ صفحه داشت
باید کتاب ظهور و سقوط رایش سوم رو حتما دوستان مطالعه کنند پیش از هر چیزی
Profile Image for Nat Kidder.
144 reviews
December 4, 2020
Not one of Taylor's better efforts, but still a highly readable history, with some decent insights.

One of the book's strengths is making the leaders, often portrayed as larger than life, mere humans with human strengths and weaknesses. And the narrative is highly engaging.

Its biggest weaknesses are a curious lack of material on the northern island-hopping campaign in the Pacific -- the key to defeating Japan. And he engages in moral equivalence, particularly in the matter of Soviet-Western relations.

Written in the 1970's, it lacks a post-Cold War perspective. For example, in discussing the 1944 Warsaw uprising, he states, "An independent Poland disappeared forever in 1939.", not realizing it would re-emerge in 1989.

But all in all, a worthy read for any enthusiastic for history's last all-out multinational conflict.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews