America in World War II, 1939–1945
The complete narrative history of World War II — Pearl Harbor, D-Day, the atomic bomb, Rosie the Riveter, the Double V Campaign, and the war that made modern America, 1939-1945.
On September 1, 1939, fifty-three German divisions crossed the Polish frontier at dawn. The Blitzkrieg destroyed the Polish air force on the ground and reached Warsaw within eight days. The United States watched from four thousand miles away, separated by the Atlantic and by a fierce conviction that Europe's catastrophes were not America's to solve. The memory of 116,000 Americans dead in a war that had settled nothing had calcified into policy: neutrality, isolation, the belief that the oceans were barriers rather than highways.
Across twenty-four chapters, historian Daniel Harding Westbrook traces the full American experience in World War II — from the isolationist debate, Lend-Lease, and Pearl Harbor through Midway, D-Day, the firebombing of Tokyo, and the atomic bombs at Hiroshima and Nagasaki — and the homefront mobilization, Japanese American internment, the Double V Campaign, and the GI Bill that built the postwar middle class.
World War II was the event that made modern America — the industrial power, the international commitments, the racial contradictions, and the self-image as a nation that fights for democracy and sometimes fails to practice it. Westbrook's account delivers the military narrative and the human one: the soldiers, the factory workers, the Japanese Americans in internment camps, and the Black veterans who came home demanding the democracy they had fought for abroad.
For readers of Rick Atkinson's THE GUNS AT LAST LIGHT and Doris Kearns Goodwin's NO ORDINARY TIME.
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