We March Against England
Operation Sea Lion, 1940–41
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Narrated by:
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Paul Boehmer
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By:
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Robert Forczyk
In May 1940, Nazi Germany was master of continental Europe. The only European power still standing was Great Britain - and the all-conquering German armed forces stood poised to cross the Channel. Following the destruction of the RAF fighter forces, the sweeping of the Channel of mines, and the wearing down of the Royal Naval defenders, two German army groups were set to storm the beaches of southern England. Despite near-constant British fears from August to October, the invasion never took place after first being postponed to spring 1941 before finally being abandoned entirely.
Robert Forczyk, author of Where the Iron Crosses Grow, looks beyond the traditional British account of Operation Sea Lion, complete with plucky Home Guards and courageous Spitfire pilots, at the real scale of German ambition, plans, and capabilities. He examines, in depth, how Operation Sea Lion fitted in with German air-sea actions around the British Isles as he shows exactly what stopped Hitler from invading Britain.
©2016 Robert Forczyk (P)2016 Tantorooops
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Food for thought
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Great Details .. BUT
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I'll make an exception for Mr Forczyk. This is a truly awful analysis where a deeply biased agenda leads the exploration of chosen skewed analysis of facts Where the author promises not to explore endless 'if' scenarios & then does exactly the opposite! Where his favoured tactic is to endlessly criticise respected historians without exploring & expanding, let alone analysing their admittedly sometimes flawed analysis. Where Forczyk exposes his shallow understanding of UK, political affairs. All in all the very anthesis of a quality historical analysis!
Then to add insult to injury we are presented with one of the worst narrations I can recall. really if you cannot be bothered to learn the pronunciation of places & people names you have no place as a narrator.
I guess you get what you pay for& it is no surprise that this is part of the prime content!
A just awful historical analysis!
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content OK - narration bad to the point of comedy
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