Following directly from Time-Life's World War II: The Second Front, Liberation gets right into what happened after D-Day and the drive to free France - in the North, the South, and Paris itself - and even a bit of the Netherlands push as well - chronicling the military movements and personal anecdotes surrounding that part of the conflict. A lot of these books fall into what I might call statistical story-telling, which is to say that I get lost in all the numbers. Division number something of army number something had this number of every kind of troop, vehicle, weapon and/or provision, lost this number of men to this number of bombs, etc. I will retain none of it. More interesting to me are the personal stories and the stakes. Things like Paris' peril when Hitler ordered its complete destruction just for spite, prevented by a general who couldn't bring himself to do it (the next book over in my collection is on the Resistance, so that's going to fill in the gaps nicely), or what was going on between Allied leaders and where the push to Berlin stalled on a judgment call. But for the most part it IS one village or bridge capture after another.