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Aftersleep Books
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Europe s Last Summer Who Started the Great War iThe following report compares books using the SERCount Rating (base on the result count from the search engine). |
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Aftersleep Books - 2005-06-20 07:00:00 | © Copyright 2004 - www.aftersleep.com () | sitemap | top |
This is not a history of the war itself but of the background and events leading to the start of hostilities. It provides an excellent analysis of the 37 days between the assassination in Sarajevo of the Archduke Franz Ferdinand and the declarations of war. A must read for those who have been confused by or have trouble remembering why exactly the catastrophe took place.
The main thesis is that much of what has been accepted as conventional wisdom regarding the war's causes for the last century is misguided. High officials in the German and Austrian governments conspired to wage two wars of aggression - Austria against Serbia, Germany against Russia. These officials bear sole responsibility for the "Great War". This plot was formed well before June 28th, 1914. The date served only as a pretext for the violence previously planned by these two powers.
The author disproves several myths. One - that the war came as a complete surprise to a peaceful Europe. Two - there actually was no Schlieffen Plan. Three - that a rigid structure of alliances coupled with railway schedules and irreversible mobilization plans caused the war.
Much of the criticism of Mr. Fromkin's book from other reviewers on this site is, in the opinion of this reader, unfounded. This topic is too important and complex and encompasses too much history to be covered in a magazine article. Fromkin's research is complete. His A Peace to End All Peace should attest to his mastery of the era. Far from boring, the form only accentuates the author's case and reduces the confusing nature of the subject. Also, I'm not sure originality should be a goal in history writing - rather truth and clarity.
A simple map at the beginning and a highly useful index of all the players at the end make this a great history as well as reference. This was a long-needed book. David Fromkin is a great historian.