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    Paris '44: The City of Light Redeemed

    Paris '44: The City of Light Redeemed

    by William Mortimer Moore


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      ISBN-13: 9781612003443
    • Publisher: Casemate Publishers
    • Publication date: 11/19/2015
    • Sold by: Barnes & Noble
    • Format: eBook
    • Pages: 486
    • Sales rank: 328,742
    • File size: 32 MB
    • Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

    Of Anglo-Dutch descent, William Mortimer-Moore was born in 1958 and educated at Dean Close School and University College, Cardiff. He has always wanted to write and, after a detour involving advertising copywriting, property, building and a couple of unpublished novels, William decided to address his love of history and France by writing this biography of Leclerc. He lives in Cheltenham in the United Kingdom where he is presently writing a book about Paris during 1944.

    Table of Contents

    Preface. – General Leclerc’s Mission

    Part 1. De Gaulle, the French and the Occupation. 1940-1944
    Part 2. Marianne Rises. August 1st- 18th 1944
    Part 3. Insurrection. August 18th- 22nd 1944
    Part 4. Paris Saved. August 22nd-31st 1944

    Epilogue
    Source Notes

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    During the fall of 1944, once the Western Allies had gained military advantage over the Nazis, the crown jewel of Allied strategy became the liberation of Paris—the capital of France so long held in captivity.

    This event, however, was steeped in more complexity when the Allies returned than in 1940 when Hitler’s legions first marched in. In 1944 the city was beset by cross-currents about who was to reclaim it. Was it to be the French Resistance, largely ephemeral throughout the war and largely Communist? Or was it to be the long-suffering Parisians themselves, many of them meantime collaborators? Or the Anglo-American armies which had indeed won the victory?

    Then there were the Free French forces led by Charles de Gaulle, and his second, General Leclerc, who now led a full (albeit American-supplied) armored division? The Germans, too, still retained a hand, with the option to either destroy the city, per Hitler’s wishes, or honorably cede it.

    This book punctures the myth parlayed by Is Paris Burning? and other works
    that describe the city's liberation as mostly the result of the insurrection by the Resistance in the capital. In fact, de Gaulle gave Leclerc his orders for the liberation of the city as early as December 1943, and the General’s great march down the Champs Élysées the day after the liberation was the culmination of a carefully laid plan to re-establish the French state.

    Amidst the swirling streams of self-interest and intrigue that beset the capital on the eve of its liberation, this book makes clear that Leclerc and his 2nd Armoured Division were the real heroes of the liberation and that marching on their capital city was their raison d'etre. At issue was the reconstitution of France itself, after its dark night of the soul under the Germans, and despite the demands of the Anglo-Americans and France’s own insurrectionists. That a great power was restored is now manifest, with this book explaining how it was ensured.

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    Martin Windrow
    'This valuable book weaves together the intricate parallel chains of events - military and diplomatic, French (both internal and external), Allied and German - that led General Leclerc's French 2nd Armoured Division to the boulevards of Paris in August 1944. Drawing upon a mass of diverse accounts and memoirs, it also offers many insights into the moral complexities faced by French men and women of that generation. Inevitably, it reminds us yet again of Britain's immense good fortune in avoiding the appalling consequences of a foreign military occupation - a lesson that we can never be taught too often.'
    Books Monthly UK
    Sets the record straight. Students of twentieth century French history will find this of particular interest
    War in History
    This one definitely gets the full five stars. I am reminded of some of the classics I read years ago – a style of writing that has faded a little in modern times. This book follows on beautifully from the works of those by Alistair Horne and while I am far from an expert on the subject the prose here really does bring wartime France to life. This is a very important book, and if you want to achieve a deeper understanding of the bigger picture of the liberation of Europe, then you really must read it.
    History of War Magazine
    Paris ’44 is an enthralling literary race … A swashbuckling read’
    WWII History
    "...delves into the subject matter to separate myth from fact... deftly shows the competing interests and the intrigues of each party to achieve a free Paris for their own ends.
    Paris Readers Circle
    For those eager to know more, to have a fuller, more detailed picture…this book can be highly recommended.
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