I was knocked out by this book. Isabel Denny was my A level history teacher a few years back, and in her classes you could not let your attention slip for a second. Take a look out of the window for half a minute and you missed something crucial. At the end of two hours, I would have terrible writer's cramp: I had to write down almost every word because Isabel Denny had stripped out all the irrelevance, and everything she said was valuable.
There is a point to this nostalgia: 'The Fall of Hitler's Fortress City' is exactly like those classes. There is no spare fat, no paragraphs to skip. In some ways it almost reads like a novel: the story is so well told, and the pace so well-judged that you'll find yourself whizzing through it in no time, and picking up knowledge almost without noticing. And it is never remotely dry!
In fact, it makes fantastic reading. The story is of course harrowing, but Isabel Denny makes the history so riveting - and remains so balanced and impartial - that it is a joy to read. And if, like me, you didn't already know this story, it explains such a lot about the war in the east - and, indeed, the west. You'll keep saying, "Oh! So THAT'S why..."
The other thing that makes it so approachable is the mix of pure textbook history with eyewitness testimony. This clever combination means that although Denny remains scrupulously impartial, the narrative is never unaffecting. She can be dispassionate in the history, but deeply sympathetic to the personal stories: so we are made both to understand, and to care about the suffering on both sides.
If you're an ordinary reader with an interest in history generally - and especially if you're interested in WWII - I'm sure you will love this book.
Highly recommended. Just how history SHOULD be written.