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Great Battles of History

Anzio: The Gamble That Failed

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Anzio, a small town a mere hour's drive from Rome, became a battleground on which both Allies and Germans paid a bloody price. Planned by Churchill as a swift amphibious flanking maneuver, the 1943 battle of Anzio has been viewed by some as one of the most ill-conceived tactical operations of the Allied war effort, and by others as one of the war's singular lost opportunities. Blumenson examines the actions of the men involved, including Churchill, Eisenhower, Clark, and Montgomery, and takes into account records from Allied and German sources.

228 pages, ebook

First published March 21, 1978

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About the author

Martin Blumenson

68 books13 followers
Martin Blumenson was a soldier in the US army, and a military historian, and a recognised authority on the life of Gen. George S. Patton Jr.

Blumenson received a Bachelors and Masters degree from Bucknell University in Pennsylvania. He received a second master's degree in history from Harvard University. He also was an exellent pianist, performing at Carnegie Hall as a young man.

He served as a U.S. Army officer in northwestern Europe during World War II.
After the war he lived in France for a number of years, where he met his wife of 55 years, Genevieve Adelbert Blumenson, who died in 2000.

Blumenson again served with the U.S. Army during the Korean War, and later worked in the Office of the Chief of Military History until 1967. After this he became an adviser on civil disorders for the Johnson administration.

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Profile Image for Dimitri.
1,008 reviews257 followers
January 24, 2020
Since Blumenson wrote the Green Book on the U.S. part of the Italian campaign, nobody was better placed to digest its main operations into shorter monographs of greater clarity. In this respect, his small paragraphs have an Osprey feel. On the other hand, the scattered insertion of individual soldiers' most memorable moments can't disguise the dullness of diluted Official History prose..
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