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Stalingrad

Letters from the Volga

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Stalingrad. From August 1942 to February 1943 this model industrial city, bathed by the waters of the Volga, was home to the bloodiest battle of World War II. Stalingrad: Letters from the Volga offers a fast-paced depiction of this titanic struggle: explicit, crude, and without concessions—just as the war and the memory of all those involved demands.
The battle rendered devastating results. Almost two million human beings were marked forever in its crosshairs, a frightening figure comprised of the dead, injured, sick, captured, and missing. Military and civilians alike paid with their lives for the personal fight between Stalin and Hitler, which materialized in long months of primitive conflict among the smoking ruins of Stalingrad and its surroundings.
Stalingrad: Letters from the Volga presents the battle, beginning to end, through the eyes of Russian and German soldiers. Take a chronological tour of the massacre, relive the fights, and feel the drama of trying to survive in a relentless hell of ice and snow.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 15, 2019
      WWII’s largest and bloodiest battle gets recounted in this gory and densely researched work of graphic nonfiction. In 1942, the German army’s initially successful assault into Russia grinds to a halt. As winter approaches, Soviet and Nazi armies face off around the city of Stalingrad, where over two million souls will endure a freezing crucible. Gil and Ortega ostensibly structure their narrative around a band of beleaguered German soldiers trying to snuff out the stubborn “Ivans.” But with the exception of back-home letters mixing grandiloquent phrasing (“fire-tongued assassins rip through the sky”) with plaintive hopelessness (“beaten in a sea of ruins, the Red Army does not surrender”), they opt for historical details over personalization. Many famous aspects of the battle are highlighted, from the Soviet snipers to the “night witches” flying stealthily overhead in their biplanes, and the underground horror of the Rattenkrieg (war of rats). The narrative frequently pulls back from the punishingly savage combat in Stalingrad’s frozen hell for a bird’s-eye view of the wider battle ripping across the Eastern Front. The art emphasizes action over storytelling, leaving it mostly to the overheated yet accurate text to describe the battle’s epic horrors. This relentless account provides a devastatingly grim vision of a pivotal WWII battle.

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  • OverDrive Read
  • PDF ebook

Languages

  • English

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