Fotografía de autor
32 Obras 111 Miembros 5 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Stephen Wynn is a retired police officer having served with Essex Police as a constable for thirty years between 1983 and 2013. He is married to Tanya and has two sons, Luke and Ross, and a daughter, Aimee. Both Stephen's grandfathers served in and survived the First World War, one with the Royal mostrar más Irish Rifles, the other in the Mercantile Marine, whilst his father was a member of the Royal Army Ordnance Corps during the Second World War. mostrar menos

Incluye el nombre: Stephen John Wynn

Obras de Stephen Wynn

Women in the Great War (2017) 11 copias
Dover in the great war (2017) 5 copias
Chatham in the great war (2017) 4 copias
Animals in the Great War (2019) 4 copias
Hitler's Air Defences (2021) 4 copias

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Miembros

Reseñas

An interesting and well-meaning book let down by errors in compiling and attributing the photographs.
 
Denunciada
ManipledMutineer | Jan 23, 2022 |
Awful, shambolic, hit and miss collection of stuff from a few websites.
 
Denunciada
JJ27VV | otra reseña | Aug 23, 2021 |
Even though one can be well-versed in a subject, one can always learn more, which is why I'm glad I read Women in the Great War. This little book reads quickly and packs more of a punch than you might initially think-- and the illustrations add icing to the cake.

Although it does concentrate on British women, the book does cover the incredible accomplishments of women in other countries, and I'd never heard of these women before so I really appreciated their inclusion. Outlining how women's lives in Britain were before World War I, Women in the Great War then moves on to each organization that played an important role in the war effort. Toward the end, the book turns into a roll call of those women who lost their lives in service to their country. Some might consider this roll call boring, but I found it touching. It's probably the first time most of these women's names (and what they did) have ever been mentioned.

My favorite parts in this book occurred whenever the British government finally began to learn that women could do more than cook, clean, and give birth. More than one women's organization asked for the British government to sanction their work and they were turned down. Countries like France and Belgium had no such silly scruples and welcomed the women to do their part-- and they all made a huge difference. The British government finally began to learn a lesson, and it's one that they would unfortunately have to remember in just twenty years' time.
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Denunciada
cathyskye | Oct 4, 2020 |
Holocaust – The Nazis’ Wartime Jewish Atrocities

When we think about the Holocaust today, many people automatically think of Auschwitz the Nazi extermination camp in Poland. When Auschwitz became part of the Nazi killing machine in 1943, most Jews of Eastern Europe were already dead. My family were originally from Skalat in what was Poland, now Ukraine, where the Germans, backed up by the UPA (Ukrainian Army) rounded up the Jews and murdered them. Men, women and children were not spared.

But this excellent short book from Stephen Wynn, looks at what started as painting the Star of David on Jewish Business’s and making German Jews where the star too. From there to the atrocities that wartime Germany undertook, in the name of Adolf Hitler. That some Germans tried to say they did not know is a lie, and again this book is a reminder of that.

So we get reminders of The Wannsee Conference, where the Final Solution was made real, Reinhard Heydrich and the Einsatzgruppen. The organ and the man who put the plan in to action, before being killed during the war, by Czech partisans.

Wynn looks at some of the Operations of the Nazis such as Operation Harvest Festival, as well as some of the female Nazi guards. As well as explaining the work of some of the death camps, not only Auschwitz, but Treblinka, an area even today you cannot hear birds singing, Sobidor a place that should send shudders down anyone’s spine. While there is no mention of the massacre of Wolyn, it is not surprising as the Ukrainian collaborators would not like that being highlighted.

With short chapters of when the Allies knew, I would say quite early, but the Polish Home Army was not believed by the Allies. Some even suggested the Poles were exaggerating the position. Even today more information comes to light and Wynn does mention the Holfe Telegram which came to light in the Public Record Office at Kew, in London in 2000, from 1943. This contained a number of cables that discussed how many Jews had been murdered in the occupied General Government area, and Ukraine.

This book will raise eyebrows if you do not know the full story of the Holocaust and this is an excellent introduction to the historiography which is consistently developing. Unfortunately, the Holocaust deniers will ignore this book, and basic facts. But for those wanting to start learning more about the Holocaust this is an excellent starting point.
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Denunciada
atticusfinch1048 | Mar 22, 2020 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
32
Miembros
111
Popularidad
#175,484
Valoración
3.0
Reseñas
5
ISBNs
110

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