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The Other Side Of The Hill [Hardcover]

B H Liddell Hart
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover
  • Publisher: Natraj Publishers, Dehradun (1985)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 8181580966
  • ISBN-13: 978-8181580962
  • ASIN: B001TE8J68
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,612,680 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Sir Basil Henry Liddell Hart
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
21 of 21 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Paperback
Liddell Hart's selected and highly edited conversations with defeated German generals have the benefit of immediacy but suffer from the twin hurdles of the Generals' desire to dissociate themselves from the evils of Hitler, and L-H's own salient ego and sense of injustice at having being ignored by the British Government from 1928 -45. If you can keep in mind the ulterior purposes of both interviewer and interviewees then there is considerable interest to be had in gaining an insight into contemporary German military thinking and planning (or at least what the survivors wished - post Nuremburg Trials - to convince the Western World they were thinking and planning) particularly since so much military history of the period has been written by the victors from a largely US and British perspective. This is, however, the raw material of history with all the blemishes attendant upon filtered primary sources, yet despite its deficiencies it contains some real nuggets and insights which are all the more apparent when one reads with the knowledge of the subsequent 50 years of historical study. In particular, neither Liddell Hart nor the Germans had any knowledge of the Ultra/Enigma decrypts which shed considerable new perspectives on several passages.

This is essentially a book for the serious student of WW2 who comes to it armed with a good knowledge of the events under discussion and a critical frame of mind not prepared to take everything at face value. Given these caveats, a worthwhile and thought-provoking work.

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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
B.H. Liddell Hart was in a unique and enviable situation just after the war. He got permission from British occupation authorities in Germany to interview top German Generals and Admirals in order to get their thoughts on The War in general, on Hitler, on various campaigns and battles and on their Allied adversaries.

Among the Gentlemen interviewed were General Heinz Guderian, the architect of the Blitzkrieg, General von Mantaufel, who commanded the fifth panzer army during the Ardennes offensive in, Field-Marshal von Manstein, the man who planned the invasion of France, Field-Marshal von Rundstedt, Commander of all of Western Europe and who directed the German response to the invasion of Normandy and General Ritter von Thoma, Rommel's second in command.

The short time that passed between the surrender of Germany and the time of the interviews, coupled with the names listed above should be enough to convince anyone with a shred of interest in the Second World War to buy the book. The style of Liddell Hart is clear and easily understood by the non-military readers. It is direct and to the point, free of prolonged lists of various army units and unneccesary discussions about them - an evil that plagues far too many books on military history.

The book will not reveal any startling surprises to the seasoned reader because of the simple fact that almost all books on The War written after 1948 have used it as a reference. But to read a second hand account of what went on in the various German headquarters during the war - to hear the views and thoughts of the German High Command straight from the horse's mouth - is unlike anything else. 

There is one subject however which is discussed in some lenght in the book and in a way not often seen. That is how Hitler managed to take to complete a control over the German Armed Forces, the officers of which were many decidedly anti-nazi. The question of why the Army didn't stage a coup earlier than it did is also answered.

The only thing that bothered me about the book are the lengths Liddell Hart goes to prove that his writings on mechanised warfare, published between 1920 and 1930, were more influential than De Gaulle's on the way mechanised warfare developed in Germany. It is as if he wants to take personal credit for the Blitzkrieg and the subsequent German victories.

All in all, and despite the author's somewhat conceited nature, this is quite a remarkable book and should have it's place on any self-respecting military historian's (be he professional or amateur) bookshelf.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
This truly is a fascinating book. From hearing the German plans for an invasion of Britain, to how Hitler controlled his Generals, this gives great insight into the minds behind the Wehrmacht. Liddell Hart, by talking to the highest echelons of Nazi Generals has produced a great story of Germany's war through their eyes, but it misses out on five stars because he completely ignores the horrors that took place. The Holocaust was not a military venture so this exclusion is excusable, but in the Eastern front especially the German armies committed atrocities on a scale Never seen before (Russian casualties were a staggering 25 million + compared to less than 500,000 for the British). Liddell Hart is perhaps too objective, never offering any opinion other than strategic military thought. This is not necessarily a bad thing and it does make a change to read about the Third Reich without being appalled, but that he doesn't even denote a sentence to the darker side of the German war machine is an error in my opinion. It is still a brilliant, alternative account of the War, and from the perfectly succinct introductions to each chapter, to the stature of the quotes presented, it is quite a scholarly achievement.
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