The Battle of Britain offers an in-depth assessment of the situation
leading up to the summer of 1940, the strategies employed by the
adversaries and the brutal aerial battle itself. In 1940 Britain was an
island under siege. The march of the Nazi war machine had been
unrelenting: France and Belgium had quickly fallen and now the British
Empire and the Commonwealth stood alone to counter the grave threat.
However, their fate would not be decided by armies of millions but by a
small band of fighter pilots. It was on their shoulders that Britain's
best chance of survival rested. Above the villages and cities, playing
fields and market towns, the skies of southern England were the scene of
countless dogfights as the fledgling Fighter Command duelled daily
against the might of the Luftwaffe.
Lavishly illustrated with photographs, contemporary art and posters, and
accompanied by numerous first-hand accounts, this is a volume that
captures the reality of a defining chapter in British history.