
Details
- ISBN 9780813320809 / 0813320801
- Title Crete: The Battle and the Resistance
- Author Antony Beevor
- Category European History
Second World War
Battles & Campaigns
General & World History - Format Paperback
- Year 1994
- Pages 416
- Publisher Westview Press
- Imprint Westview Press Inc
- Language English
- Dimensions 155mm x 26mm x 234mm
A riveting account of the fall of Greece, the Battle of Crete, and the CretanResistance, from the beginning of World War II to its end.
Drawing on original sources and the experiences of key participants, this book recounts the fall of Greece in World War II, the Battle of Crete and the resistance from beginning to end. The invasion of Crete totally from the air, unique in the history of warfare, turned into one of the closest-run battles of the war. The slaughter of German paratroopers on the first day by New Zealand, Australian and British troops was so great that if just one Allied platoon had still been in place at the key position of Maleme airfield the next morning, the Germans would have been forced to admit defeat. It was in the battle for Crete that Ultra intelligence played a key role for the first time. How General Freyburg, Churchill's favourite hero from World War I, handled that information and the battle itself remains controversial. This book shows how Freyburg misread an Ultra signal at the crucial moment - and with disastrous consequences.
The book also considers some of the characters involved in the campaign: Peter Fleming, with his private army known as “Yak Mission”; the archaeologist John Pendlebury, with his glass eye and sword-stick; and commando leader Bob Laycock and his intelligence officer, Evelyn Waugh, for whom the retreat over the mountains to Sphakia triggered deep disillusionment and self-loathing.
The book also considers some of the characters involved in the campaign: Peter Fleming, with his private army known as “Yak Mission”; the archaeologist John Pendlebury, with his glass eye and sword-stick; and commando leader Bob Laycock and his intelligence officer, Evelyn Waugh, for whom the retreat over the mountains to Sphakia triggered deep disillusionment and self-loathing.
Antony Beevor is the author of a number of histories, including “The Spanish Civil War” and “Stalingrad,” which has been published in twenty-three languages and was awarded the first Samuel Johnson Prize for Non-Fiction, the Wolfson History Prize, and the Hawthornden Prize for Literature.
Write a review