WW2

A Winning Reading List for the Paris 2024 Olympics

Happy Olympic Games! Are you ready to run rings around the season of sports? Mark the lighting of the torch with this Olympian collection of titles on the history and ever-enduring ethos of the Games and the Herculean athletes at the heart of them.

Upcoming Autumn Books for Your Rainy Day Reading Nook 🍂

It’s been a very autumnal summer here in the UK — now, it’s time to prepare for the real thing. But as they seasons change, so too do bookshelves. Stockpile for the cool breeze and falling leaves by pre-ordering a pile of shiny new books. (And it’s not like we’re biased or anything, but here are a few that we just can’t wait for!)

The Echoes of WWII: War Stories and Radio Propaganda

Author Denis Courtois imparts some of the ancestral anecdotes that stayed with him throughout his studies and how this lore inspired him to write his new book about Allied, Axis, and Vichy governments exploiting radio to win over the population in Occupied France.

Cover image of Sergeant Hiram Prouty atop a tank dressed as Santa Claus handing candy out to children.

The Paradox of Christmas at War

“Always winter, but never Christmas”. For many observing Christmas in 1942, this fictional quote was the harrowing truth. This week’s blog is from New York Times bestselling author Peter Harmsen as he reflects on the events of that fateful wartime Christmas and what they tell us about cruelty, kindness, and the human condition in extraordinary times.

Law, Morality, and Pure Evil: The Nuremberg Defendants

Is the law always a sufficient mechanism for justice? Can morality ever be objective? How do you begin to construct a legal defense for pure evil? In this blog post, author Andrew Sangster discusses the process of researching and conceptualising his new book, Blind Obedience and Denial, which examines every defendant at the Nuremberg trials,… Read More »Law, Morality, and Pure Evil: The Nuremberg Defendants

Researching the life of a naval hero: Captain Chris O’Flaherty reflects on the journey of writing his new book.

To mark the publication of Torpedoes, Tea and Medals this month, we asked author, Captain Chris O’Flaherty, about the writing process and his research into the fascinating life of Derek ‘Jake’ Wright DSC** RNVR – a previously little-known wartime naval hero who went from being a 16 year-old tea-trade trainee to one of only 44… Read More »Researching the life of a naval hero: Captain Chris O’Flaherty reflects on the journey of writing his new book.