ORIGINAL: simovitch
I wonder how many bottles of belgian beer it will take to convince Mark-Jan and Andries to come back and help bring BFTB in for a landing?
![]()
We'll give it a try [;)]
Greetz,
Eddy Sterckx
Moderators: Panther Paul, Arjuna
ORIGINAL: simovitch
I wonder how many bottles of belgian beer it will take to convince Mark-Jan and Andries to come back and help bring BFTB in for a landing?
![]()
ORIGINAL: Hanno Meier
As a book on the Ardennes Offensive, I recommend:
Danny Parker's : Battle of the Bulge: Hitlers Ardennes Offensive 1944-1945
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1580970230/ref=cm_cr_pr_product_top
He also designed seveal boardgames on this Operation
ORIGINAL: Llyranor
Is A Time for Trumpets sufficient if it turns out to be the only book I read on this subject?
ORIGINAL: Llyranor
What about details of the battle itself (OOB, maps, the operational aspect, etc)? Does it cover both sides well?
ORIGINAL: Llyranor
Also, how is Battle by John Toland?
ORIGINAL: Llyranor
If I were to get *one* more book aside from A Time for Trumpets, which one would complement it best? Danny Parker's book, or some other one?
That sounds like a good book. What is Hurtgen Forest's relevance to the Bulge in general?ORIGINAL: sterckxe
ORIGINAL: Deerslayer
and both MacDonald's Bulge books are great.
I concur.
Currently enjoying a book dealing with the "other side of the hill" entitled "Victory was Beyond their Grasp" by Nash, which tells the story of the 272nd Volksgrenadier division which took part in the Bulge (Kesternich). The book has a lot of low-level organizational & combat details at the company level and above. If you want to know how the "train" of a German VG company was organized, or how far away from the observation outposts the mortars were positioned, this is the book for you.
Greetz,
Eddy Sterckx