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Bitter
struggle
Endurance and sacrifice in the rubble of Stalingrad
Stalingrad: Memories and reassessments
By Joachim Wieder and Heinrich Von Einsiedel. Weidenfeld & Nicholson.
320pp. $19.95.
Reviewer
::
Cpl Troy Hutchinson
Written
in three parts, this classic memoir of the world war two struggle
for Stalingrad by one of the few Germans who survived, Joachim Wieder,
was written in 1962.
Part
one, Wieder's tale, tells of the courage and endurance of the abandoned
Sixth Army, encircled by the Soviets in blitzed, frozen Stalingrad.
Wieder,
a German orderly officer in enemy intelligence - well placed to
contrast Russian and German tactics - recounts his disbelief of
the sacrifices made by Hitler's refusal to allow 250,000 German
troops to retreat from the city.
He
discusses the psychological impact on troops torn between loyalty
and self-preservation in this riveting tale.
Part
two discusses the critical assessments, 50 years on, making in-depth
evaluations on the decisions of the key military figures involved.
The
third part is set aside for the appendices of where information
was researched and obtained.
Wieder's
tale was the first German book on Stalingrad to be published in
the Soviet Union and should sit in the reference library of any
serious student of WW2.
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