D-Day and Normandy: A Visual History (Paperback)

D-Day and Normandy: A Visual History By Anthony Richards Cover Image

D-Day and Normandy: A Visual History (Paperback)

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In the hours before dawn on June 6, 1944, an unprecedented assemblage of men, weapons, and machines swung into action. The long-awaited, highly secret D-Day invasion had begun. By the end of the day, the mission to liberate Europe had made its most crucial advance.

This richly illustrated account draws on the unparalleled collections of the Imperial War Museums to reconstruct the invasion and its aftermath through images of artifacts, documents, period photographs, and art. Eyewitness accounts put the reader in the middle of the action, reminding us that even with all the careful planning and firepower the Allies were able to muster, the outcome of the invasion was far from certain. Recreating the drama and danger of D-Day, this book is a perfect commemoration of a day that changed the world.
Anthony Richards is the head of documents and sound at Imperial War Museums.
 
Product Details ISBN: 9781912423217
ISBN-10: 1912423219
Publisher: Imperial War Museums
Publication Date: September 29th, 2021
Pages: 232
"These images offer a rare insight into this decisive victory."
— CNN Style

"Incredible photos reveal how D-Day unfolded hour-by-hour 75 years ago. . . . The collected snaps vividly show the timeline of one of the most crucial military victories for the Allies in the Second World War."
— Sun

"Incredible photos reveal how D-Day unfolded hour-by-hour 75 years ago . . . . astonishing colour photographs . . . . The collected snaps vividly show the timeline of one of the most crucial military victories for the Allies in the Second World War."
— The Sun

"Rare photos and historians' painstaking detective work map out [the] reality of how the Allies launched the world's biggest ever military op . . . . The shots, published chronologically for the first time ever, have brought to life one of the key turning points of the Second World War."
— The Daily Mail

"Rare photos and historians’ painstaking detective work map out [the] reality of how the Allies launched the world’s biggest ever military op. . . . The shots, published chronologically for the first time ever, have brought to life one of the key turning points of the Second World War."
— Daily Mail (UK)