Blog - Tuesday 8th December 2009
I’ve just finished writing my new book about the Battle of Britain, which has taken me the best part of three years to put together. I’ve always been amazed by how often aspects of the Second World War quickly became the acceped way of regarding things and have been continued by historians ever since. The Battle of Britain is a prime example. Since the HMSO pamplet published in 1941 first appeared, the Battle has been viewed as RAF Fighter Command versus the Luftwaffe, yet this both isolates it as a much smaller conflict and demeans the significance of what happened in that incredible summer of 1940. Moreover, most accounts look at it only from the Allied perspective, which also provides a very narrow-minded view. Read more…
Posted by James Holland
Talking point - Tuesday 8th December 2009
The Extraordinary Life of Field Marshal Alexander
When I was a young boy, I used regularly to get a magazine called Look and Learn. In one of the editions there was a large article on Britain during the Second World War and included circular head and shoulder illustrations of Britain’s war leaders. Montgomery was one of the field commanders, Alexander was the other. To my ten year-old eyes, Monty, with his beret and sharp features, aroused my juvenile mistrust. The picture of Alexander, on the other hand, made a considerable impression. His distinctive peaked cap and smart appearance made him look how I imagined a general should look, but I was also struck by his gentle eyes with laughter lines stretching down from either side. He seemed kindly and humorous, and at that age, the cut of someone’s gib seemed very important.
From that moment on, Alexander was on my radar – not massively so because for the next twenty years, through school, university and beyond, I never studied the Second World War and had only a passing interest in the subject; but I did not forget about him, nor, for some reason, that image from a magazine that has long since disappeared from the shelves. Read more…
Posted by James Holland