Fully illustrated, this study assesses the Soviet and Waffen-SS troops
who contested the cities of Kharkov and Rostov-on-Don on the Eastern
Front during 1942-43.
As the Axis invasion of the Soviet Union unfolded, two places that
suffered exceptionally severely were Kharkov (now Kharkiv) in Ukraine
and Rostov-on-Don in Russia. In total, Kharkov would change hands
violently four times between October 1941 and August 1943, and
Rostov-on-Don also four times between November 1941 and February 1943.
In this book, Chris McNab examines the fighting men of the Red Army and
the Waffen-SS who clashed in three battles - one for Rostov (July 1942)
and two for Kharkov (February-March and August). He clearly explains the
key differences between these two opponents - training, tactics,
weaponry, ideology and motivation - and examines how these differences
played out in the three engagements, which ranged from open-terrain
combined-arms battles to close-quarters street fighting in major urban
zones. The text is complemented by specially commissioned artwork and
mapping and carefully chosen archive photographs.