Explore the latest books of this year!
Bookbot

Peter Elstob

    December 22, 1916 – July 21, 2002

    This author explored the dynamics of war and adventure, drawing from his extensive military experience and unconventional life. His writing is characterized by a passion for travel and a willingness to take risks, offering readers a unique perspective on history and human nature. He was known for his ability to draw readers into the heart of events with an engaging style. His life was filled with endeavors that seemed more suited to another century, a spirit reflected in his literary legacy.

    Legion Condor
    Il sacrificio umano delle Ardenne
    Hitler's last offensive
    Warriors for the Working Day
    • 2020

      Based on Peter Elstob's own wartime experiences, Warriors for the Working Day follows one tank crew as they proceed from the beaches of Normandy into newly liberated Western Europe, brilliantly evoking the claustrophobia, heat and intensity of tank warfare.

      Warriors for the Working Day
    • 2003

      Hitler's last offensive

      • 432 pages
      • 16 hours of reading
      4.0(14)Add rating

      This is the full story of the Battle of the Ardennes. in the last weeks of 1944 the German armies in the west, after a continuous retreat since the battle of Normandy five months earlier were regrouping in what they thought was to be the last battle in defense of the Fatherland. But Hitler had other plans - to mount an offensive through the Ardennes that would deal such a blow to the Western Allies that they would be willing to negotiate a separate peace. This is the offensive known as the Battle of the Bulge.Could Hitler's gamble have succeeded? Could he have reached his objective, the port of Antwerp? Peter Elstob unfolds the whole panorama of the "last offensive" which was one of the bloodiest battles of the Second World war, punctuated with many acts of individual acts of heroism and many errors of judgment by the firebrand General George Patton, the superb German generals and others. Paradoxically, all it ensured was that the Russians would reach Berlin first.

      Hitler's last offensive