Tormented Warrior - Parkinson

Body

Tormented Warrior. Ludendorff and the Supreme Command by Roger Parkinson. From the blurb: 'Few military commander in history have wielded greater power than did General Erich Ludendorff in the closing days of World War One. He directed an army of five million men and, for more than a year, was the virtual dictator of Germany, eclipsing the Kaiser himself. His reputation has been tarnished by wartime propaganda and by the fact that he lent his name to Hitler's post-war Nazi movement. Even Ludendorff's appearance has been used against him. With his close-cropped hair, hanging jowls, and unrestrained paunch, his face flushing with rage beneath his spiked helmet, he seemed the archetypical Prussian officer, resembling the cartoons of the "Hun" drawn to entertain Allied troops. Roger Parkinson's vivid and challenging reappraisal seeks the reality behind the caricature. He emphasizes the difference between Ludendorff's patriotism and Hitler's megalomania, explains the thinking behind the "stab-in-the-back" and blitzkrieg theories which caused his influence, for better or worse, to live on.' Illustrated. Hardcover. 251pp.                                                                                                                                                                                              

Edition
First, 1978
Book Publisher
Hodder and Stoughton
Book ISBN
0340214821
Book Dimensions
24 × 16 × 2.5 cm
Condition

Very good in a very good price clipped dustjacket. Some spotting to the page edges. The dj has a little wear to its top edge.

Stock Level
1
Price
£10.00
Variations
Images