I think Japan still would have invaded the Soviet Union though, if the Second Sino-Japanese War continued (the oil embargo only really happened once they invaded Indochina).
Other than that I agree with you. That would be curious alternate reality.
Rick Atkinson writes very polished historical war narratives. “An Army at Dawn” and “Day of Battle” are great reads. The “Palgrave Concise Historical Atlas of the Second World War” by Martin Folly is neat. Its not your typical book, its a collection of maps in chronological order of major battles and turningpoints of the war. Each atlas includes a concise overview and a briefing of the event.
Cornelius Ryan’s “Bridge too Far”, and that is having read several WWII non-fiction. I don’t think I’ve ever read any WWII Fiction.
GG
King Rat
Von Ryan’s Express
@RogertheShrubber:
Rick Atkinson writes very polished historical war narratives. “An Army at Dawn” and “Day of Battle” are great reads. The “Palgrave Concise Historical Atlas of the Second World War” by Martin Folly is neat. Its not your typical book, its a collection of maps in chronological order of major battles and turningpoints of the war. Each atlas includes a concise overview and a briefing of the event.
I have been reading his Liberation Trilogy…i have to say one of the best treatments of Operation Torch, the war in North Africa and the Italian campaign…
Das Boot and Haie und kleine Fische
Call me old school but I really like John Toland’s The Rising Sun a history of the Pacific war from the Japanese point of view. In this you will find that they viewed Guadalcanal as a bigger defeat than Midway.
His Biography on Hitler (Adolf Hitler)is very good too. In both books he had the advantage of interviewing many of the survivors and participants involved.
He also wrote a very good book on WW1 called No Man’s Land, 1918 the Last Year of the Great War. = excellent. I got him to autograph a copy for me years ago.
And speaking of WW1 John Mosier’s Myth of the Great War is a very good modern “new” military history of WW1
I also like Albert Speer’s book Inside the Third Reich.
And I will give a shout out to Time-Life for the Third Reich Series, for what it is its a pretty decent series.
I’m afraid I don’t read fiction history books very often. The only one I can remember was Fatherland which was later made into a TV movie with Rutger Hauer about Germany getting the Bomb at the same time as the US and a sort of new cold war and a meeting between Hitler and President Kennedy (Joe Kennedy) in 1964. But that pesky Holocaust was the fly in the ointment to the meeting going off. I did read The Eagle has Landed too.
what the hell?
Beevors’ Berlin and stalingrad, and the others
those are the best non-fiction ww2 books there are!!
Band of Brothers
band of brothers is good I also like a very old book called marine at war
I really liked Army at Dawn, still haven’t read Day of Battle but will eventually.