The Blitz
By (Author) Professor Peter Doyle
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Shire Publications
20th December 2010
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Modern warfare
European history
940.54211
Paperback
56
Width 149mm, Height 210mm
113g
May 1941: over 43,000 civilians had been killed, and over a million houses destroyed following endless nights of bombing raids. Yet London, and other cities that had been targeted survived, their spirit undaunted, their people resilient. Revisionist historians have sought to dampen the notion of the 'Blitz spirit', but the writings and surviving records all point to a resilience that would remain unbroken, despite the death toll rising to almost 52,000 from bombing alone. Illustrated with archive photographs and other materials, and illuminated by first-hand recollections of the Blitz, this human history of the bombing raids on Britain is the perfect introduction to this dark episode in British history.
Peter Doyle is a scientist and military historian specialising in the role of terrain in warfare. In addition to numerous scientific books and papers, he has written several books, including: The Home Front: 1939-45 (Crowood, 2007, with Paul Evans); and several titles for Shire. He is co-secretary of the All Party Parliamentary War Graves and Battlefield Heritage Group, and is an elected member of the British Commission for Military History. He lives in London.