In This Issue (May/June 1994 | Volume: 45, Issue: 3)

In This Issue

AH article image

Authors:

Historic Era:

Historic Theme:

Subject:

May/June 1994 | Volume 45, Issue 3

It’s been thirty-five years since the appearance of Cornelius Ryan’s classic account of the D-day invasion, The Longest Day (Touchstone, 338 pages, $11.00 soft cover, CODE: SAS-7 ), which is still among the best. This year’s fiftieth anniversary of the battle for Normandy has produced a clutch of commemorative books, starting with Stephen Ambrose’s comprehensive and readable D-day June 6, 1944: The Climactic Battle of World War II (Simon & Schuster, 704 pages, $30.00, CODE: SAS-8 ). “The destruction of the enemy’s landing attempt,” Adolf Hitler warned in March of 1944, “is the sole decisive factor in the whole conduct of the war and hence in its final result.” Ambrose, whose Eisenhower Center in New Orleans has been collecting D-day recollections since 1983, shows how right the F’fchrer was; he draws on hundreds of fresh interviews to document the events of those crucial hours.

Although the ranks of Operation Overlord’s survivors have thinned, there are still enough veterans left for this season’s several oral histories. “It would have killed us not to go,” a former machine-gun sergeant from the 29th Infantry recalls in Gerald Astor’s big, exciting roundup, June 6, 1944: The Voices of D-day (St. Martin’s, 456 pages, $25.95, CODE: STM-1 ). “Raymond Hoback suffered from bad nosebleeds but he would not accept a discharge. … Jack Simms ate bananas to gain enough weight so he wouldn’t be left behind.” Ronald J. Drez, the assistant director of the Eisenhower Center, has selected 150 of its 1,400 interviews for Voices of D-day (Louisiana State University Press, 312 pages, $24.95, CODE: LSU-1 ). One seventeen-year-old paratrooper, Ken Russell, made the jump over Ste.-Mère-Eglise on the night of his high school graduation in Tennessee. Three of his comrades didn’t reach the ground; “they landed on telephone poles down the street and it was like they were crucified there.” Russell Miller’s Nothing Less than Victory: The Oral History of D-day (William Morrow, 512 pages, $25.00, CODE: MRW-1 ) stands apart by including a few German remembrances: one ex-soldier tells of listening to Louis Armstrong records and reading Heinrich Heine poems, both of which were banned by the Nazis, while he waited for the Allied attack. Another, Hubert Mayer, likens the wait to “expecting a huge hurricane” and being forced to stay on the beach rather than hide.

Louisiana has published a terrific, novelistic memoir, David Kenyon Webster’s Parachute Infantry: An American Paratrooper’s Memoir of D-day and the Fall of the Third Reich (Louisiana State University Press, 270 pages, $29.95, CODE: LSU-2 ). On that moonlit June night, Webster, then a recent Harvard English graduate, crumpled up his copy of General Elsenhower’s rallying message to his troops, muttering, “We’re [not] a bunch of knights on a goddamn crusade.” Private Webster decided to keep the mimeograph anyway as a souvenir and