This book covers the story of the last ten days of the Second World War, from the death of Hitler on 30 April to the celebration of VE-Day in Moscow on 9 May.
The author, for the most part, manages to paint a lively portrait of the events of that closing chapter. He succeeds in bridging the gap concerning the motivations, incentives, and chaos that shaped the behemoth effort of the Allies as they neared the finish line, and the Germans as they reeled from the collapse of their army, shifting from a Hitler-led crumbling Reich to an administration governed by the man he assigned in his will, Karl Dönitz.
As it concerns the battles and military engagements throughout the different fronts, they are captured with a measure of brevity that doesn't get caught up with technicalities (don't expect a detailed laydown of motorized divisions and such), but one that's boiled down to the essentials while maintaining the integrity of the events relative to their importance .
All of this unfolds against the backdrop of the internal dynamics of the Grand Alliance, where tensions and strategic interests among the Western Allies and between them and the Soviets influenced not only military decisions but also the political framework shaping Germany's surrender. The book captures how diplomacy, mistrust, and competing visions for postwar Europe colored the final days of the conflict.
On the British side, a strategy of restraining communist ambition was being put in place. Churchill’s policy was based on a lack of trust in his Russian allies. The post-Hitlerite Dönitz government, for their part, had an approach with the aim of postponing a full and unconditional surrender to all parties for as long as possible, in an attempt to buy time for German soldiers and civilians fleeing the Red Army to reach British and American lines-a strategy based on their loathing of Bolshevism. They attempted to end the war through piecemeal surrenders to the Western Allies, and in the process, sowed mistrust in the Grand Alliance in the hope of turning West against East, or as the author put it, "Surrender was the policy in the West; in the East, the war was to be continued for as long as possible."
Though Eisenhower, on the American side, served as a much-needed balance, it was the fairness and straight dealing of General Dwight Eisenhower which, more than anything else, had kept the Grand Alliance intact.
Now to the problem I had: the treatment of the subject matter was satisfying, shifting from the point of view of chiefs of staff to the civilians caught in the brutal situation on the ground, to the normal soldier. All was well until the topic of the German signing of surrender. Due to many reasons relating to German dishonesty in trying to play for time and delay as much as possible a surrender to the Soviets, and the respect the Soviet side placed on the symbolism surrounding the signing and how it should proceed (not to mention their constant paranoia of both the Germans and what seems to Stalin the unclear at best and unreliable at worst Western–German relation), there were multiple signings. The author’s treatment of these, constantly shifting across chronological order, left you at times wondering what was happening when. The last couple of chapters toward the end also dragged on, and by the close of it, I lost interest and investment, though I finished reading nonetheless.
All in all, it was a useful addition to my WW2 library (limited as it stands now but with willingness to expand) and offers a nice starting point for familiarizing oneself with the latter chapters of the war.
rating: 3/5