Introduction; 1. The creation of myths after 1945; 2. British policy and strategy in the two world wars; 3. British generalship in the two world wars; 4. At the sharp end: combat experience in the two world wars; 5. Attrition in the First World War: the naval blockade; 6. Attrition in the Second World War: strategic bombing; 7. The transformation of war on the Western Front, 1914–18; 8. The British army: learning process in the Second World War; 9. After the wars: gains and losses; Select bibliography.
This title challenges popular views of the First World War as catastrophic and futile and the Second World War as a well-conducted and victorious moral crusade.
Brian Bond is Emeritus Professor of Military History at King's College London, where he has played a leading role in the development of military history in the Department of War Studies from 1966 to 2001. He was president of the British Commission for Military History from 1986 to 2006. He has published numerous books including The Unquiet Western Front (2002) and Survivors of a Kind: Memoirs of the Western Front (2008).
'Offering a host of shrewd judgments on Britain's military
performance in the two world wars, Brian Bond has written an
important book on the achievements, the failures and the price paid
by Britain and her people for victory in 1918 and 1945.' Jay
Winter, editor of The Cambridge History of the First World War and
author of Remembering War: The Great War and Historical Memory in
the 20th Century
'Brian Bond has been at the forefront of British military
historians for over fifty years. This latest masterly work,
challenging many of the myths concerning Britain's experience in
two World Wars, shows that his scholarship and objectivity remain
undiminished.' Peter Simkins, co-author of The First World War: The
War to End All Wars and author of Kitchener's Army: The Raising of
the New Armies 1914–1916
'A stimulating and challenging reassessment of Britain's role in
the two worlds wars by a leading authority.' Gary Sheffield, author
of A Short History of the First World War
'This is a very important work for any student of military history,
of the problem of history and popular memory, and of the wars
themselves.' A. A. Nofi, The Nymas Review
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