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Naples '44 : A World War II Diary of Occupied Italy

Naples '44 : A World War II Diary of Occupied Italy

List Price: $13.95
Your Price: $10.46
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent!
Review: I am always browsing Amazon and I have never taken the time to write a review, but this book deserves it! I have read many books on WWII and Italy and this is the only one that made me REALLY feel like I was there. Excellent writing and shocking details. Must read!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent!
Review: I am always browsing Amazon and I have never taken the time to write a review, but this book deserves it! I have read many books on WWII and Italy and this is the only one that made me REALLY feel like I was there. Excellent writing and shocking details. Must read!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Unbreakable life spirit in time of war
Review: The author wrote a diary during his stay as a member of the allied occupational force in Naples after the allied liberation. The "liberators" turns out to be more corrupt and less disciplined by the fascists, and even the previous German occupiers. The civilian population suffered incredible privations from the corrupt and mafia influenced occupationary government, and from soldiers and bandits rampaging through the countryside. The author is gradually won over unbreakable spirit and adaptability of the Italians. The book is written in a direct and conversational tone that goes directly to the heart.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Unbreakable life spirit in time of war
Review: The author wrote a diary during his stay as a member of the allied occupational force in Naples after the allied liberation. The "liberators" turns out to be more corrupt and less disciplined by the fascists, and even the previous German occupiers. The civilian population suffered incredible privations from the corrupt and mafia influenced occupationary government, and from soldiers and bandits rampaging through the countryside. The author is gradually won over unbreakable spirit and adaptability of the Italians. The book is written in a direct and conversational tone that goes directly to the heart.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Snapshot of WWII Seldom Discussed
Review: This is not a book for the sqeamish, nor is it a book for those seeking a Tom Brokaw-ish golden memory of WWII. It is, however, a wonderfully written, and easy-to-read war diary. Every page is fascinating in it's detail of human behavior. If you are seeking information about the movements of great armies and generals,or a recap of military hardware or uniforms, this isn't it. This is a good look at what war does to the people who have to live in the middle of it, and how occupying armies deal with people and customs they barely understand. We have very deep ties with Italy and the Italians, so it makes one wonder whether it's possible for Iraq to make a post-invasion recovery. There is a critical difference, we and the Germans mostly disarmed the Italian populace.They didn't wander the streets with AK-47s and RPGs, though weapons were hidden for a possible civil war. I also recommend reading "The War in Val D'Orcia" by Iris Origo for a look at WWII Italian life farther north in the Apennine mountains of Italy.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Best and Best
Review: This is quite possibly the best book about World War II AND the best book about Italy you're likely to find... Full of striking telling detail from the opening confusion of the Allied invasion on the beaches of Salerno (the author, a young British intelligence officer posted to Italy behind his knowledge of Spanish, finds himself under fire in a wilderness of typewriters and other randomly strewn office equipment) to the improbable eruption of Vesuvius (and the Neapolitans' belief, amply demonstrated by historical prededent, that otherwise inexorable flows of lava could be stopped by the relics of Catholic saints)... Lewis is a master observer of the particular and this book, written after a mid-1950s perusal of his old wartime notebooks following publication of half a dozen other volumes, shows off his unmatched gift for quiet understatement. The residents of Naples were reduced to medieval conditions of famine and hygiene and were heartily sick of the war in 1944, prostitution was rampant with young girls often the only employables in a family, electric lines and even manholes were plundered for their scrap value. A clandestine mail service between Naples and still-Nazi-occupied Rome was a particular vexation to Lewis and his intelligence collegues, especially as some of Naples' most prominent citizens (including a midget gynecologist who was able to use both hands for non-incision internal surgery, and who specialized in restoration of virginity), were among the amateur postmen. The doings of Lucky Luciano and other characters on the late-WWII scene in Italy, and the incredible bungling and callousness of the occupation authorities are ably chronicled. Don't miss this one.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Enjoyable, insightful reading - sometimes disturbing realism
Review: Vignettes of the author's observations of war time Italy while assigned to Naples area as part of British Intelligence. First hand descriptions of the Neopolitan's desperate ordeal to survive with little food and work available. Tremendous insight into Italian culture and customs. Sad portrayals of ancient towns bombed to rubble by allied forces, perhaps unnecessarily. But most disturbing are his reports from various sources that the American troops marching through Italy had been given orders not to take any German prisoners alive. Any Germans who surrendered were to be shot.


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