George Koskimaki wrote three books on the 101st Airborne Division. They are 1) D-Day with the Screaming Eagles, 2) Hell's Highway: Chronicle of the 101st Airborne Division in the Holland Campaign, September - November 1944, and 3) Battered Bastards of Bastogne. This is a review of book three, Battered Bastards of Bastogne. George Koskimaki offers unique insights, as he was 101st Airborne Division commanding general, General Maxwell Taylor’s radio operator.
Battered Bastards of Bastogne fleshes out in vivid detail the entire story of the Screaming Eagles' valiant struggle. It gives us information not covered in the other books by interweaving the stories of 530 soldiers interviewed who were on the ground or in the air over Bastogne. They lived, made this history and much of it is told in their own words.
The story of the Battle of the Bulge is amazing. We learn how little time had passed from the Holland Campaign before the 101st is pulled from being their reserve role. We see ill-equipped they were in terms of weapons. We find out their equipment and uniforms had not been replenished after Market Garden/Holland Campaign. We hear the often-told story of the lack of winter weather gear. We see how stupid some were in tossing their limited cold weather gear like over shoes when the weather was a little less cold at the beginning of the battle. We see circumstances with General Taylor being called back to the USA for a staff conference, the shifting of key senior NCO's due to enjoying their time off line too much, and how the division moved into combat via ground transportation for the first time.
I especially enjoyed the detail and interweaving of the soldiers stories. It is amazing to view moments on the battlefield through multiple points of view. Some readers may find the book hard or even tedious to get through because of the detail. I did not. I found it added to the story. As in the author's two previous works on the 101st I find the personal accounts gave vitality to the story. It kept it flowing instead of reading like a military after action report. Once again, Mr. Koskimaki did a superb job of telling the history the 101st Airborne Division. I appreciated the way the book is both descriptive and detailed. It gives you a feel that you are there with the men. The author did an outstanding job in this area. This is must reading for any student of World War II history.
Tuesday, July 31, 2012
Saturday, July 14, 2012
Hell's Highway by George Koskimaki
George
Koskimaki was 101st Airborne Division commanding general, General Maxwell
Taylor’s radio operator. He wrote the three-book history of the 101st
Airborne during World War Two. Hell's Highway: Chronicle of the 101st Airborne
Division in the Holland Campaign, September - November 1944 is the second book
in the series.
I
had previously read Cornelius Ryan’s “A Bridge to Far”, Stephen Ambrose’s
“Band of Brothers” and “Citizen Soldiers”, Robert Kershaw's “It Never Snows in
September: The German View of Market-Garden and the Battle of Arnhem, September
1944”, Martin Middlebrooks’s “Arnhem 1944: The Airborne Battle” (focusing on
the British specifically at the Arnhem sector), and James Gavin’s “On to Berlin”.
All of the books gave good presentations and different points of view of
Operation Market Garden. George Koskimaki’s book is based on interviews with
more than six hundred paratroopers journals the soldiers intense personal
accounts. It gives the vivid previously untold versions of the Screaming
Eagles' valiant struggle.
Hell's
Highway gives us something not covered in the other books. It tells of the
Dutch people and members of the underground and their liberation after five
years of oppression by the Nazis. It shares how they have never forgotten
America's airborne heroes and how the 101st endangered and even
sacrificed their lives for the freedom of the Netherlands and Europe.
While
some readers may find the book hard or even tedious to get through because of
the detail, I did not. The personal accounts gave vitality to the story. It
kept it flowing instead of reading like a military after action report. Mr. Koskimaki
did a superb job of telling the history the 101st Airborne Division
during Operation Market Garden.
The
book is just right for beginners and experts of the 101st Airborne
Division. The three books George Koskimaki wrote on the 101st Airborne
Division are 1) D-Day with the Screaming Eagles, 2) Hell's Highway: Chronicle
of the 101st Airborne Division in the Holland Campaign, September - November
1944, and 3) Battered Bastards of Bastogne. I highly recommend the book.
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