I’ve read over 10,000 pages worth of WWII history. This wasn’t just reading for the sake of reading. This was reading with a purpose: to dig, and keep digging until I’d arrived at the truth.
I’d divide what I’d read into at least three categories:
- WWII history as fictionalized from the Allied perspective.
- WWII history as fictionalized from the Axis perspective. (Much less common than 1.)
- Actual history.
One normally does not encounter much history written from the Axis perspective. At least in mainstream history books, to the extent that fictionalization has occurred at all, it’s from the Allied perspective only. Often this occurs through omission. For example: a historian fictionalizing things in an Allied-friendly way will often act exactly as if Germany had enough food with which to feed its own people. He will remain silent about the Allied food blockade. He will be equally silent about the false promises France had made to Poland in 1939 (a French general offensive against Germany), and will provide no alternative explanation for Polish diplomatic policy in 1939. For those who want fictionalized, feel-good history like that, there are plenty of mainstream history books out there.
But suppose you want a mainstream history book that’s straight truth. A book written for adults, not children. The book you want is Wages of Destruction by Adam Tooze. Below is some praise for this, one of the best history books I’ve read, on any subject, hands-down.
“It is among Adam Tooze’s many virtues, in “The Wages of Destruction: The Making and Breaking of the Nazi Economy,” that he can write about such matters with authority, explaining the technicalities of bombers and battleships. Hovering over his chronicle are two extraordinary questions: how Germany managed to last as long as it did before the collapse of 1945 and why, under Hitler, it thought it could achieve supremacy at all.”
-Norman Stone, The Wall Street Journal
“Virtually every page of his book contains something new and thought-provoking, making the whole an impressive achievement, in which original research has been combined with critical scrutiny of a vast literature that seems ripe for such a re-examination.”
-Michael Burleigh, The Sunday Times (London)
“A magnificent demonstration of the explanatory power of economic history.”
-The Times (London)
“Masterful . . . Tooze has added his name to the roll call of top-class scholars of Nazism.”
-Financial Times