During the Allied advance across northwest Europe in 1944, the opening
up of the key port of Antwerp was a pivotal event, yet it has been
neglected in histories of the conflict. The battles in Normandy and on
the German frontier have been studied often and in detail, while the
fight for the Scheldt estuary, Walcheren and Antwerp itself has been
treated as a sideshow.
Graham Thomas's timely and graphic account underlines the importance of
this aspect of the Allied campaign and offers a fascinating insight into
a complex combined-arms operation late in the Second World War. Using
operational reports and vivid firsthand eyewitness testimony, he takes
the reader alongside 21 Army Group as it cleared the Channel ports of
Calais, Boulogne and Dunkirk, then moved on to attack the Scheldt and
the island stronghold of Walcheren. Overcoming entrenched German
resistance there was essential to the whole operation, and it is the
climax of his absorbing narrative.