Over 75 years have passed and the D-Day landings have lost none of their
impact. Even today the vestiges of Hitler's Atlantic Wall speak of the
huge undertaking necessary for the Allies to gain a foothold in
Normandy. In this beautiful new full-color book, the reader goes
"on-site" to the sacred battleground from its scarred medieval villages
to the remains of modern means of destruction.
The huge armada that attacked from Britain left behind many signs of
their passage: from the huge caissons of the mulberry harbor around
Arromanches, the gun emplacements at Longues and Merville, to the
multitude of hardware used as memorials--tanks, artillery,
pillboxes--and the many graves and cemeteries that honor those who died
on both sides. It is in memory of the dead that much of what can be seen
on the ground survives, but as the last few survivors reach their 90s, a
new audience requires information about the events of the past that can
only come from seeing the ground where the battle was fought. Today, the
beaches are a fascinating mixture of the new and the old, including the
new visitors' center at Colleville and the renovation and expansion of
the Utah Beach museum--even as further new memorials jostle with the
older sites that have changed little in 75 years.
The Normandy Battlefields details what can be seen on the ground today
using a mixture of media to provide a complete overview of the campaign.
Maps old and new highlight what has survived and what hasn't;
then-and-now photography allows fascinating comparisons with the images
taken at the time--particularly the aerial views--and computer artwork
provides graphic details of things that can't be seen today.
The book describes the area from Cherbourg to Le Havre by way of the key
D-Day locations, providing a handbook for the visitor and an overview
for the armchair traveler. It covers, wherever possible, the forces from
both sides and the memorials to those young men who fought so many years
ago.