Book description
Fifty years after the end of World War II Clive Ponting provides a
major reassessment of the most destructive conflict in human history -
one in which 85 million people died.
Armageddon avoids conventional chronological accounts in
order to concentrate on the deeper forces shaping the origins, course
and outcome of the war across the globe. It analyses how and why the
war spread from being a limited European conflict to the only global
war, why countries were dragged into the fighting and how only a small
number of neutral states escaped. It compares the two alliances, how
they mobilized their resources and their strategies for victory. It
avoids a detailed description of how commanders maneuvered on the
battlefield and concentrates instead on the impact the war had on
individual soldiers, sailors and airmen. Equally important is the fate
of hundreds of millions of civilians. How did they survive occupation
and what did resistance, collaboration and liberation really involve,
and what happened at the end of the war?
Armageddon has a truly global sweep, combined with an eye for
detail, and provides fascinating comparisons from a multi-faceted war.
It contains new facts, asks provocative questions and challenges many
of the common assumptions about the war. It is a compelling new inquiry.
Clive Ponting is an author and a lecturer in politics at University
College Swansea. He has written three books about British government, as
well as a widely praised study of the 1964-70 Labour government,
Breach of Promise,
and an account of Britain's Finest Hour,
1940; Myth and Reality.
He is also the author of
A Green History of the World
, which has been translated into seven languages, and, most recently,
the controversial
Churchill.