A review by larryerick
The Longest Day: June 6th, 1944 by Cornelius Ryan

3.0

I do not intentionally try to diminish the qualities of this book by my rating. It IS a worthwhile read, especially if you don't know much about D-Day. It covers the lead up to D-Day and D-Day itself well, but it suffers from having too much to cover, and, as a result, through no fault of its own, can do no more than a widely scattered reporting of many different events and persons, resulting in a certain level of superficiality. (For a comparison, watch Ken Burns' The Civil War, and then read Shelby Foote's The Civil War: A Narrative. The comparison reveals Burns' video to be so superficial as to be misleading and ultimately inaccurate at times.) Moreover, this is really just Chapter 1 of a much larger book, so to speak. You certainly have a feeling of being cut off from the story line when the book ends. "What happens next? Tell me." For that reason and for the quality of Ryan's scholarship, I intend to read more of his work, such as The Bridge Too Far.