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D-Day: The First 24 Hours

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In any military operation throughout history, few 24-hour periods have been as crucial as that of June 6 of 1994. Nearly 7000 ships landed over 132,000 US, British and Canadian troops on the beaches of Normandy in the biggest amphibious landing ever attempted. During that first day the allied forces were at their most vulnerable to German counterattack. Had the landings failed, the course of the war would have been altered. With the aid of specially commissioned maps, D-Day The First 24 Hours narrates the dramatic history of the first 24 hours of the Normandy landings, and explains in detail the events that occurred in each landing zone. With first-hand accounts from both sides, vivid color photographs, and specially commissioned maps of the landing areas and combat zones, D-Day The First 24 Hours is a comprehensive examination of the first 24 hours of the liberation of Europe.

192 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2003

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About the author

Will Fowler

158 books15 followers
Will Fowler is Professor of Spanish at the University of St Andrews, where he has taught since 1995. He earned his PhD at the University of Bristol and worked as a lecturer in Spanish at Leicester Polytechnic (subsequently renamed De Montfort University) for four years before joining the University of St Andrews.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Jose Luis.
256 reviews33 followers
November 8, 2025
El libro describe todo lo sucedido en el día D (6 de junio de 1944), desde la preparación de los soldados tierra-mar-aire, las primeras batallas de las fuerzas aerotransportadas, la llegada de las tropas a las playas de Normandía con detalle de cada desembarco (Utah, Omaha, Gold, Juno y Sword) como el nombre de las unidades, armamento y tanques detallado por el lado aliado como por el lado alemán.
El costo de vidas y lo sucedido al final del día D.

El libro es en pasta dura y de tamaño grande, contiene fotos, mapas a color con gran detalle.
Si te interesa conocer de forma detallada lo sucedido el día D, este libro si vale la pena.

Agrego la Sinopsis del libro:
En cualquier operación de la historia, pocos periodos de 24 horas han sido tan cruciales como el del 6 de junio de 1944. Alrededor de 7.000 buques desembarcaron en las playas de Normandía y más de 132.000 soldados norteamericanos, británicos y canadienses se unieron en el mayor ataque anfibio jamás realizado.

Con ayuda de ilustrativos mapas, este libro muestra la dramática historia de las primeras horas del desembarco, explicando detalladamente, de oeste a este, lo que ocurrió en cada playa. Estos campos de batalla significaron el comienzo de la liberación de Europa, y sus nombres en clave eran Utah y Omaha para las playas norteamericanas y Gold, Juno y Sword, para las británicas y canadienses.

El Día D: Las primeras 24 horas, explica detalladamente todas las operaciones realizadas en Normandía, incluyendo la matanza de los soldados de EE.UU. en la playa Omaha, la dispersión caótica de las fuerzas aerotransportadas por la campiña francesa, la pesadilla logística para consolidar cada cabeza de playa, el fracaso de los británicos y canadienses en su avance hacia Caen y combates de menor entidad como el de los Ranger norteamericanos escalando los acantilados de Pointe du Hoc para eliminar las baterías de los cañones alemanes. También dedica un espacio a los desembarcos paracaidistas y de planeadores que precedieron al ataque principal.


Debo de decir que al ser tan detallado si contiene algunos errores que hasta yo detecté como errores en alguna fecha, distinto nombre del batallón en el mapa al que aparece en el texto o hay párrafos que se pierde la coherencia en el texto y parece que habla del ejército aliado pero es el ejército alemán.

Si eres de los que te molestan estos detalles no lo recomendaría porque harías corajes pero si lo dejas pasar entonces si, ¡Consíguelo!.
Profile Image for Robert Hepple.
2,277 reviews8 followers
December 12, 2015
D-Day – The First 24 Hours tells the story of the Normandy invasion of June 6, 1944. The text is supported by over 120 excellent photographs, some of which are in colour, and over 20 other illustrations, mainly representative maps. Despite the title, slightly less than half of the 192 pages is devoted to the first 24 hours of the battle, preceded by a lot of information about the preparation for the operation and followed by a short chapter about its aftermath. The information given is surprisingly detailed in the light of the books short length, but seems strongly biased towards coverage of the USA’s contribution. In addition there are a lot of careless errors in the text and in the photo captions – page 55 refers to a photo of the Destroyer HMS Holmes as a Capital ship, page 90 has a supposed quote from a Hauptmann Fromm of the 22 Panzer Division, a unit which was disbanded in 1943, and page 101 refers to Jeeps being transported slung under the bomb bay of Handley Page Hastings, an aircraft type that entered service in 1948 and didn’t have a bomb bay – and there are more. And yet, in spite of errors like this, you also get a terrific amount of useful information like the detail about Widerstandsnesten strongpoints dotted along the coast. An enjoyable read for the most part, but the silly errors are frustrating.
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