Building on the earlier volume dealing with British armor of the First
World War, this is the second of a multi-volume history of British tanks
by renowned British armor expert David Fletcher MBE.
This volume traces the story of the British use of the tank through the
early years of World War II, when Britain relied on its own tanks built
in the late 1930s, and those designed and built with limited resources
in the opening years of the war. Plagued by unreliable vehicles and
poorly thought-out doctrine, these were years of struggle against an
opponent well versed in the arts of armored warfare. It covers the
development and use of the Matilda, Crusader, and Valentine tanks that
pushed back the Axis in North Africa, the much-improved Churchill that
fought with distinction from North Africa to Normandy, and the excellent
Cromwell tank of 1944-45. It also looks at Britain's super-heavy tank
projects, the TOG1 and TOG2, and the Tortoise heavy assault tank,
designed to battle through the toughest of battlefield conditions, but
never put into production.