About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 113. Chapters: World War II by medium, World War II historians, World War II propaganda, Stephen E. Ambrose, Len Deighton, A. J. P. Taylor, American propaganda during World War II, Japanese propaganda during World War II, Propaganda in the Soviet Union, Viktor Suvorov, Nazi propaganda, Four Freedoms, Correlli Barnett, British propaganda during World War II, Propaganda of Fascist Italy, Willie Gillis, Nicholson Baker, Role of music in World War II, William L. Shirer, World War II in popular culture, B. H. Liddell Hart, Martin Gilbert, Nigel Hamilton, Fitzroy MacLean, 1st Baronet, Forrest Pogue, Ken Hechler, Carlo D'Este, Bruce Barrymore Halpenny, David Glantz, Robert Leckie, Antony Beevor, Ivan Timokhovich, Nemmersdorf massacre, Roman Jarymowycz, Telford Taylor, Simon Kitson, Keep Calm and Carry On, Tony Banham, Richard Overy, S.L.A. Marshall, Richard Landwehr, John Keegan, Michael Howard, Arrigo Petacco, Oystein Sorensen, Harry Hinsley, Michael Carver, Baron Carver, Battle of Stalingrad in popular culture, Thomas M. Hatfield, Ladislas Farago, Cornelius Ryan, Hans Fredrik Dahl, Marek Jan Chodakiewicz, Gavin Long, George Odgers, Nazis in fiction, Denis Whitaker, Alistair Horne, Norman Leslie Robert Franks, Freedom from Want, Anthony Read, Tim Greve, Tide of Iron, Laurence Rees, William Deakin, John Toland, Westland, Gordon Prange, Ronald E. Powaski, Charles Whiting, Yank, the Army Weekly, Writers' War Board, British Security Coordination, Tore Pryser, Fiction based on World War II, David William Fraser, Robert Cowley, Charles B. MacDonald, Edwin Palmer Hoyt, Michael Burleigh, John A. English, Freedom of Speech, Freedom from Fear, Gary Sheffield, James D. Hornfischer, Loose lips sink ships, Dan van der Vat, Winter War in popular culture, Kenneth Macksey, Freedom to Worship, Bomb Rack, John Erickson, Frank Walker, James Rusbridger, R...