Hellstorm: The Death of Nazi Germany, 1944-1947
It was the most deadly and destructive war in human history. Millions were killed, billions in property was destroyed, ancient cultures were reduced to rubble—WWII was truly man’s greatest cataclysm. Thousands of books, movies and documentary films have been devoted to the war. But there has never been such a gripping retelling of the story as one will find in Hellstorm: The Death of Nazi Germany. Throughout this book readers will see what Allied airmen saw as they rained down death on German cities; or the reader will experience what those below felt as they trembled in their bomb shelters awaiting death.
The Devil's Handiwork: A Victim's View of "Allied" War Crimes
By Herbert L. Brown; edited by John R. Tiffany. The Devil’s Handiwork is an amazing 275-page compilation of chapters on war crimes committed by the “good guys” against the “bad guys.”
Many of the events covered in this book are to this day censored or twisted in mainstream history books.
The Bombers and the Bombed: Allied Air War over Europe 1940-1945
By Richard Overy. Writing to President Franklin Roosevelt in 1943 about a recent Allied bombing of the Bulgarian capital, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill said: “If the medicine has done good, let them have more.”
Bulgaria was on the Axis side at the time, and an enemy of Britain and the U.S. But as British historian Richard Overy shows, the Allies also dished out plenty of harsh medicine to the conquered European countries on their side.
In this survey of the American and British bombing campaign in Europe during World War II, Overy breaks new ground by revealing that almost a third of the bombs the Allies dropped on the continent were on occupied countries that they were trying to “liberate”!Bombing Vindicated
By J.M. Spaight. Published in 1944 by a former British Principal Secretary of the Air Ministry as a response to increasing discontent in Britain with the Allied bombing of German cities, this book set out to justify the saturation bombing of civilians.
Reflecting official British government policy, it states clearly that the idea to saturate bomb civilian targets was initiated by the British in May 1940, and that Hitler opposed this concept and refused to retaliate for months while German cities were bombed, hoping that “Churchill would come to his senses.”