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War and Peace

FDR's Final Odyssey: D-Day to Yalta, 1943–1945

#3 in series

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The "gripping and powerfully argued" final volume in the acclaimed 3-part biography of FDR at war—proving that he was the key strategist of WWII (New York Times Book Review).
Nigel Hamilton's celebrated trilogy culminates with a story of triumph and tragedy. In the spring of 1944, FDR oversaw the historic success of the D-day landings he had championed, just as he was found to be mortally ill. Yet even in the face of his own mortality, Roosevelt was the architect of a victorious peace that he would not live to witness.
Using hitherto unpublished documents and interviews, Hamilton rewrites the famous account of World War II strategy given by Winston Churchill in his memoirs. Seventy-five years after the D-day landings we finally get to see, close-up and in dramatic detail, who was responsible for rescuing, and insisting upon, the great American-led invasion of France in June 1944, and why the invasion was led by Eisenhower.
As FDR's D-day triumph turns to personal tragedy, we watch the course of the disease, and how the dying president attempted—at Hawaii, Quebec, and Yalta—to prepare the United Nations for an American-backed postwar world order. Now we know: even on his deathbed, FDR was the war's great visionary.
"A first-class, lens-changing work." —James N. Mattis, former US secretary of defense
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    • Library Journal

      December 1, 2018

      Following Mantle of Command and Commander in Chief, this work concludes award-winning biographer Hamilton's account of Franklin Delano Roosevelt at war, strategizing for D-day, then war's end as he battles mortal disease while planning for the war's end and what lay beyond. With a 40,000-copy first printing.

      Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      April 1, 2019
      The final installment of the biographer's significant study of Franklin Roosevelt's sine qua non leadership in World War II. It seems safe to say that, following his Commander in Chief: FDR'S Battle with Churchill, 1943 (2016), Hamilton is not Winston Churchill's greatest admirer. As this volume recounts frequently and at length, Churchill often attempted to assert British leadership of the tripartite alliance with the United States and the Soviet Union, especially by pressing not for a cross-Channel invasion of Europe but instead for a push up through Italy, "an alternative Mediterranean strategy" that had the virtue, for Churchill, of taking place in a theater that was largely in the British sphere to begin with. Churchill's strategy endangered one of D-Day's lesser-known effects: The Western Allies' pledge to open a second front in continental Europe would in turn produce a deepening of the war in the East--so Stalin promised, at any rate, while nursing a private bitterness that the Soviet Union had borne the brunt of the fight. Meanwhile, Germany exploited the weaknesses that emerged by floating hints of making a separate peace, with Joseph Goebbels noting in his diary that "Americans have only a secondary interest in the war in Europe and are only inspired by the war against Japan." Even so, and against the odds, the Allies held together, an achievement that Hamilton credits to FDR's unwavering leadership even in the face of Churchill's maneuvering--and even though FDR, by the author's account, knew that he was dying and still pressed on. The fact that those German offers were floated in March 1945, however--no secret from Hitler but a deliberate strategy--increased the Soviet mistrust of the Western powers and, Hamilton suggests, may have "presaged the Cold War" that followed the defeat of the Axis powers. Of considerable interest to students of presidential and American military history, though likely to court criticism from the Churchill camp.

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 8, 2019
      Hamilton (Commander in Chief: FDR’s Battle with Churchill) closes out his trilogy focusing on Franklin D. Roosevelt’s role in WWII with this thorough and deliberate recounting of the final months of Roosevelt’s life, during which he suffered through increasingly poor health while leading the U.S. toward the end of the war. Hamilton aims “not only to chart with fresh clarity how dire was his affliction, but how exactly it affected his decisions and once masterly performance as commander in chief of the Western Allies.” Hamilton shows how Roosevelt “held the feet of the British to the D-Day fire” during the 1943 Tehran meetings, when Churchill began to doubt the war strategy prior to meeting with Stalin. Returning from that success, Roosevelt’s health took a turn for the worse; what first seemed to be a bout of flu was more serious cardiac complications. While ill, he won an unprecedented fourth term as president, rekindled an affair with Lucy Rutherfurd, and met again with Stalin and Churchill in Yalta to plan for a postwar world order, including the founding of the United Nations. The depth of coverage of these 17 months may be more than some readers desire, but it vividly recreates FDR’s decline and makes his accomplishments all the more impressive. Like its predecessors in the trilogy, this volume will reward readers of WWII and presidential history. Illus.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from May 15, 2019
      Concluding his three-volume study of FDR's WWII leadership (Mantle of Command, 2014; Commander in Chief, 2016), Hamilton examines the president's influence on the climax of the conflict. Asserting that historians have neglected FDR's point of view, he reconstructs it from thorough integration of eyewitness evidence of seemingly everyone who interacted with Roosevelt. Beginning with FDR's 1943 journey to Iran, Hamilton lauds his subject for insisting, against strenuous British objections, that D-Day be launched in early 1944. If details about how his selection of Eisenhower as commander at Normandy illustrate FDR-in-charge, his leadership skills markedly eroded when his health drastically declined in late 1943, leading to his death in 1945. That he decided to stand for election in 1944, despite medical advice that he would not survive another presidential term, poses the question, Why did he? An answer, Hamilton suggests, lies in the reappearance in FDR's life of Lucy Rutherford, a former flame whose renewed friendship seems to have provided emotional support. Generally approving FDR's war decisions in his remaining months, Hamilton ably presents a work that meets any interest in FDR's wartime role and the establishment of what he hoped would preserve the peace?the UN.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)

    • Library Journal

      June 1, 2019

      Drawing from primary documents that President Franklin D. Roosevelt planned to use to write his memoirs, as well as diaries from people close to the major figures involved in planning D-Day and the end of World War II, Hamilton presents the final installment of his bibliographic trilogy, after The Mantle of Command and Commander in Chief, tracing an engaging and eye-opening series of events from the Tehran Summit through the Yalta Conference and finally Roosevelt's untimely death in 1945. Challenging what is conventionally and popularly known about the final political moves of the war through Churchill's memoirs, the book shows how intimately involved Roosevelt was in coordinating military plans, handpicking leaders, and lobbying for maneuvers to help end the war, even when faced with extreme opposition and suspicion from Winston Churchill and Joseph Stalin. Providing more context about the planning of D-Day, this work makes an ideal companion to presidential historian Michael Beschloss's The Conquerors: Roosevelt, Truman and the Destruction of Hitler's Germany, 1941-1945. VERDICT A fantastic read on its own or as part of the series for anyone interested in World War II political history or presidential memoirs.--Elan Ward, Arizona Western Coll., Yuma

      Copyright 2019 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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