Home :: Books :: History  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History

Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
The Bloody Forest

The Bloody Forest

List Price: $29.95
Your Price: $19.77
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 >>

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Battle for the Huertgen Florest.
Review: I don't believe Mr. Astor's account of the Huertgen Forest campaign flows as well as his Blood Dimmed Tide book about the Battle of the Bulge. I have read and also written about this campaign and find Mr. Astor's book authentic and reliable in its facts. It can be used as a source book to other writers.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Battle for the Huertgen Florest.
Review: I don't believe Mr. Astor's account of the Huertgen Forest campaign flows as well as his Blood Dimmed Tide book about the Battle of the Bulge. I have read and also written about this campaign and find Mr. Astor's book authentic and reliable in its facts. It can be used as a source book to other writers.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Must Read!
Review: Mr. Astor does it again. Blending history with first-person accounts in a seamless fashion, Gerald Astor gives us an outstanding read. What makes it more gripping is the fact that not much else has been written on the Huertgen Forest battles. I could not put this book down. This is a must read for any World War II history buff.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Must Read!
Review: Mr. Astor does it again. Blending history with first-person accounts in a seamless fashion, Gerald Astor gives us an outstanding read. What makes it more gripping is the fact that not much else has been written on the Huertgen Forest battles. I could not put this book down. This is a must read for any World War II history buff.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Not definitive...not interesting
Review: The Bloody Forest is an account of the battle of the Huertgen Forest, which took place during the fall of 1944. As with all of Astor's books, this is an "oral history". This means it's really a book based on the recollections by participants more than a scholarly and objective analysis of the battles. Indeed, there is no analysis or critical thinking; no historically important questions are raised or answered. Like Stephen Ambrose, Astor does not write history, but merely chronology spiced with personal accounts. Of course, this is not the point of the book, but if you are looking for an assessment of the Huertgen campaign, this is not the book you're looking for (instead, try Miller's A Dark and Bloody Ground, which is not "hard to get" as another reviewer claims).

For someone looking for a book that focuses on personal experiences of individual combatants, the book does an adequate job of providing this. The personal stories are gripping, the descriptions of being shelled in the forest and suffering airbursts are vivid, and the tales of exhaustion, frustration, and sheer terror are both pointed and poignant. I particularly liked the stories which reflected the frustrations of command during the battles. Many focused on the problems at the company level, where the predominant issues were company and platoon comander losses, causalties in general, and the poor training and integration of the green replacements. Occasionally there are also tales of battalion or regiment HQs being so out of touch with what was happening at the front lines that orders were completely rediculous and lead to serious defeats.

The book, despite these interesting tales of failures of command, is not great, due to a number of problems. First, the stories and experiences reported in the book get repetitive very quickly. They all are about artillery and airbusts, foxholes, and mines. Granted, these were key themes of the battles, but after the first 10 or 15 stories, the reader gets the point that covering your foxhole with logs was imperitive to avoid getting nailed by airbusts. Astor does a poor job of editing these comments so that the reader isn't bored. This is a major failing by Astor, as it cheapens the effectiveness of the combatants' tales of their experiences. Instead of being exciting throughout, the book plods on and on (the reader starts to think "...let me guess, this guy will dig a foxhole, cover it with logs, and then complain about mortar fire and how wet his feet are"). This isn't fair to the vets who are relating their experiences.

Furthermore, huge sections of George Wilson's If You Survive were quoted. Although the material was appropriate (Wilson's personal accounts of his exeperience in the Huertgen Forest are very interesting), I found this to be annoying. I have read Wilson's book and I was annoyed to find out that I was going to read it again instead of Astor actually providing something new. Furthermore, it is a failure on the part of the author when whole sections of another text must be quoted verbatim to carry the story along. At least Astor properly, legally, and ethically quotes the material and documents the source. Perhaps ... Stephen Ambrose should take note.

Another problem is that Astor does not provide useful maps. There are only two for the entire book. One is a broad overview map, showing the entire region of the Westwall south of Aachen. As such, it isn't useful to pick out the locations of individual towns where battles took place. The other is a more detailed map, but it only covers the portion of the Huertgen Forest that was initially invaded in the early parts of the battle. It doesn't even include Schmidt! This lack of maps was extrodinarily frustrating, even though I've read other books on the subject and am familiar with the geography of the region.

Finally, the book is very choppy. Instead of seamlessly blending the personal stories of the combatants with a tight chronology of the battle, Astor jumps around both in terms of time and space. Several pages will be devoted to a battle in one location at a certain time, and then without warning (i.e. with nothing more than a new paragraph) Astor will jump to a new location miles away and cover a different battle that took place a day earlier. This is very frustrating, particularly when there aren't supporting maps to help the reader.

In the end, the book is a disappointment if read on its own. If you are going to read only one book on the Huertgen Forest, this is not the one to read. Instead, read Miller's A Dark and Bloody Ground for a tight history as well as analysis, then read this book to add the color and grit of the peronsal accounts.

In a nutshell: A potentially great book ruined by a bad writer.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Good Oral History, Old Arguments.
Review: The strength of Gerald Astor's book lies in his oral history narrative. As a work of history, however, Astor breaks no new ground. The standard arguments: the Roer River Dams should have been the American's prime objective; the Hurtgen Forest should have been avoided; the American numerical advantage, armor and air supremacy were nullified in the confines of the forest, are repeated once again in Astor's work. Astor tries to represent as many units that took part in the fighting as possible. Good oral history, no new analysis.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Good...but misses the mark.
Review: This book certainly provides the reader with an understanding of the front-line soldier during the Battle for the Huertgen. However, Mr. Astor fails to provide a larger context in which this struggle can be understood. I had difficulty understanding how the local village battles related to one another or to the Corps or Army level for example.

The oral history is good but the "big picture" is missing.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Good...but misses the mark.
Review: This book certainly provides the reader with an understanding of the front-line soldier during the Battle for the Huertgen. However, Mr. Astor fails to provide a larger context in which this struggle can be understood. I had difficulty understanding how the local village battles related to one another or to the Corps or Army level for example.

The oral history is good but the "big picture" is missing.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A book about a little known battle
Review: This book is a terrific addition to any World War II library. The story is about a little known battle that my father took part in. Although his specific unit was mentioned on only one page, the interviews conducted by the author added a personal accounting of the battle that sent shivers down my spine. I am continually amazed that my father survived the battle at all. I wish I had known that the author was writing it; I could have added some of my father's memories: killing a woman dressed in a German soldier's uniform; seeing his buddy walk on a land mine, his body thrown up in the air to have only his belt buckle return to earth! Battles like these need to be written about more, not so much to underscore the heroism and courage of those who participated, but to keep us from making the same mistakes.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A book about a little known battle
Review: This book is a terrific addition to any World War II library. The story is about a little known battle that my father took part in. Although his specific unit was mentioned on only one page, the interviews conducted by the author added a personal accounting of the battle that sent shivers down my spine. I am continually amazed that my father survived the battle at all. I wish I had known that the author was writing it; I could have added some of my father's memories: killing a woman dressed in a German soldier's uniform; seeing his buddy walk on a land mine, his body thrown up in the air to have only his belt buckle return to earth! Battles like these need to be written about more, not so much to underscore the heroism and courage of those who participated, but to keep us from making the same mistakes.


<< 1 2 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates