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Joseph E. Persico

    Joseph E. Persico était un historien distingué dont les œuvres se sont penchées sur des moments et des figures cruciaux du XXe siècle. Son écriture se caractérisait par une recherche approfondie dans les archives et une représentation détaillée des événements. Persico explorait fréquemment les aspects plus sombres des conflits et de l'intrigue politique, éclairant des facettes moins connues des luttes guerrières et des procès d'après-guerre. Ses récits sont loués pour leur précision et leur style captivant, qui plonge les lecteurs au cœur des événements historiques.

    Geheime Reichssache
    Piercing the Reich
    11th Month, 11th Day, 11th Hour
    My American Journey
    A Soldier's Way
    • A Soldier's Way

      • 642pages
      • 23 heures de lecture
      4,0(5)Évaluer

      Colin Powell writes of his anxieties and difficulties as well as the triumphs that marked his rise to four-star US General, National Security Advisor, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, mastermind of Desert Storm, and now the man many Americans would like to draft as President.

      A Soldier's Way
    • 11th Month, 11th Day, 11th Hour

      Armistice Day, 1918, World War I and Its Violent Climax

      • 456pages
      • 16 heures de lecture

      The story of the day on which World War I, the war to end all wars, ended. Using military archives and public records, along with journals and diaries, the book will weave together the eleventh hour experiences of the famous, such as Lloyd George, President Woodrow Wilson, Field Marshall Haig and General Pershing. But more dominantly, it will deal with the ordinary men in the trenches, unsung and unremembered, the British Tommies, French Poilus, American Doughboys and German Feldgrau. Where, for example, was the Austrian corporal, Adolf Hitler, on that day? Four days before the War's end, with peace talks already underway, the beaten Germans propose an interim ceasefire to spare lives. However, the French Allied Commander, General Ferdinand Foch, refuses. Hostilities will not cease, Foch insists, before the appointed hour of the Armistice. Thus, even on the last day, the Allies are still launching full scale offenses and both sides bombard each other until the final minute of the agreed ceasefire, 11am, November 11, 1918. The last hours pulsate with tension as men in the trenches, airmen in the sky and sailors at sea hope to escape the melancholy distinction of being the last to die in the War.

      11th Month, 11th Day, 11th Hour