"It was a great surprise to me, the whole affair, because when we left here and withdrew across the Rhine the local people had a hell of a winter. Most of them were evacuated from their homes, they had no fuel, a very severe winter, great privation, cold and no food. So we quite expected when we came back that they wouldn't be best pleased to see us; in fact, we didn't expect any cooperation at all. And blow me down, it was a terrific surprise to find that not only were they polite to us, they were asking us to come back!"
This was General Urqhart, interviewed before his death in 1988. This book explains why the Dutch took the Airborne veterans to their hearts. It examines, in detail, the events along a single street (albeit a very long one) in the nine days of Operation Market Garden. As such, it does tread a lot of what may be familiar ground, but the immediacy of the setting lends a fresh perspective, and the focussing does allow for detail which is generally lost in other works.
The real attraction is the level of inclusion of the Dutch in the book. Previously, their voices tend to have been drowned in the storm surrounding them, but here we are able to follow their jubilation at liberation, fears and eventual hopelessness as the tide of battle rages around them.
I've read a lot of books on Arnhem and Market Garden over the years and I have to say that I was initially sceptical of this one having anything new to say. I'm very pleased to say that I couldn't have been more wrong, and Mr Kershaw has yet again provided a fresh perspective on the battle for me. I'd recommend it to anyone with an interest in the battle, or anyone with any curiosity about what it's like to live through a battle.