kfrink's review

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informative medium-paced

3.0

nmdplm31's review against another edition

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informative fast-paced

4.0

ethannorwoodbooks's review

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informative mysterious tense medium-paced

3.0

robboydston's review

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adventurous informative fast-paced

4.5

longhornrach's review against another edition

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informative slow-paced

2.0

rjones4040's review

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5.0

Light and engaging read. It’s not easy finding fresh stories relating to WW2 but this book managed to do just that

duparker's review

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informative medium-paced

3.5

Enjoyable look at a potential scenario where the allied leaders of WWII were targets of an assassination plot. The authors do a good job of filling 335 pages with mostly background and general history of the war. The actual plot is really a minor percentage of pages in the book. That said it's highly relatable and enjoyable. 

xsanti9's review

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informative tense medium-paced

4.25

lisabage's review

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Well written and good research. Just got tired of it. Lots of bouncing around in time so kind of hard to follow. 

dtab62's review

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2.0

I've read Meltzer's other nonfiction books, so I presumed I knew what I was in for when I bought this one. Unfortunately, this was not the case for a couple of reasons. First is a cynical and transparent attempt to equate the Nazi party of the 1930s with the modern-day Republican party. The authors went so far as to quote Hitler as saying he wanted to "make Germany great again."

That was towards the beginning of the book. At the end they repeatedly talk about Roosevelt's final day, spent in Warm Springs, Georgia. They repeatedly say the president was there with "family and friends." What they fail to mention in a clear attempt to clean up Roosevelt's legacy is that while his son was there with him, his wife Eleanor was not. His mistress, however, was. Lucy Mercer was hustled out before Eleanor arrived to take her husband's body back to Washington.

The first issue could be overlooked. If you squint hard enough there is, I suppose, plausible deniability that the authors were attempting to compare the 21st-century GOP with the Nazi party. The same can't be said about the portrayal of Roosevelt's death. That's what made the book so disappointing to me. The pages between those passages contain Meltzer's usual pop history. But it's impossible not to wonder, given the misleading account of Roosevelt's final day, what else in the book is intentionally misleading. If you're reading a history book and don't trust the authors to give a true accounting, then you're wasting your time.