The battles fought between the Allied armies and the German Wehrmacht at
Monte Cassino in 1944 were key episodes in the protracted Italian
campaign, and the eventual Allied victory was a decisive step in the
wider war to liberate Europe from German occupation. Much has been
written about Cassino, but few books have chosen to tell the story
through photographs - to give a visual insight into the fighting and the
forces involved, the conditions in which they fought, and the landscape
around the Monte Cassino abbey which became a battlefield. That is why
Jeffrey Plowman's photographic history is of such value.
Using almost 200 wartime images, many of which have not been published
before, he gives a graphic impression of the realities of the fighting
as it was experienced by the troops on the ground. He focuses on the
tanks - the array of armored vehicles deployed by both sides which
played a critical role. This aspect of Cassino has rarely been covered
in such detail and in such a vivid way.
The book will be of special interest to modelers and historians of
armored warfare, but it will also appeal to readers who have a more
general interest in the Italian campaign.