Having read many WWII books over the years I never thought I would tackle a 15 volumn set that was written 40 some years ago but I started with this one and am I glad I did. Mr. Morison's writing style is very crisp and refreshing and makes what is a minor/little know aspect of the war interesting which prompted me to purchase the rest so that I can read the entire set. If he can make the invasion of Northern France interetsing then I can only imagine what he will do with Midway & Gaudalcanal. Great book
Morison's History an Epic
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 23 years ago
Morison's 15-volume set is epic in scope, impressive in detail, and literary in execution. Written shortly after the war, and covering the every significant naval activity during the conflict, it is an impressive achievement of both history and writing. No history so expansive, and written so shortly after the war, can have all the details or rely on all the sources which come to light later, but Morison's history more than compensates for this by its immediacy. In many instances, Morison was there, or spoke with the participants shortly after the events and got their immediate impressions. Accurate or not, those perceptions are history too, and Morison did an impressive job filtering his first-hand material through after-acquired evidence to make a history which is personal, compelling and truthful.The volume on North African operations covers an important, although less dramatic chapter in World War II, and suffers a little because of it -- the landings in Morocco and Algiers, important as they were to the successful conclusion of the war, simply do not provide the dramatic moments of Midway, Pearl Harbor, or the naval battles surrounding Guadalcanal. Still, it covers a fascinating and little-known chapter in the war, and is well worth the read. Morison successfully conveys the uncertain and unprecedented nature of a trans-Atlantic invasion, along with the sense of unknown risks present at the time in the minds of the participants. And Morison's prose, as in the other volumes of his history, is a joy to read in itself.
Lots of detail; good maps; somewhat opinionated
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
I find Samuel Eliot Morison to be rather less detached from his subject than I'd like an historian to be. I think he tends to blur fact and personal opinion in his writing.That being said, this is undoubtedly THE book if you want to learn about the role of the navy in the invasion of North Africa and the eventual defeat of the Axis.He covers the various invasions in minute detail: which ships were involved, where they were, who fired at what and when, who were the commanders.This can get a little tedious, but one can skim the lists and concentrate on the overall story, which is fascinating. If anyone wants the tedious detail, it is there.Well worth reading if you're interested in WW II history.
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