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Bridge Too Far
Ryan

Pocket, 1984

average customer review:based on 71 reviews
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   highly recommended  highly recommended






Good detail but much too dry

You can tell that Ryan has done tremendous research into Operation Market Garden. But his writing style comes off as much too dry for anyone but the most avid WW II enthusiast. I am very much interested in this topic, but am not a rabid WW II fanatic. As such, I have tried no less than 6 times to read this book and can never finish it. I usually get to about 1/3 of it and have to put it back on the shelf.

So be forewarned, it will not appeal to people with a passing intereset in WW II.


Triumph and Tragedy in Holland

A Bridge Too Far, Cornelius Ryan's third and final World War II epic, is a gripping and moving account of the ill-fated attempt by the Allies to vault over the Rhine River and into Germany before Christmas 1944. As in his two previous works, The Longest Day (1959) and The Last Battle (1966), Ryan relies on clear and crisp narrative, painstaking research, and hundreds of anecdotes from Allied, Dutch and German participants.

As the Germans retreated from France and Belgium in the late summer of 1944, the victorious Allies found themselves in a dilemma created by their own success. With most of the Channel ports either still in German hands or damaged too extensively to be of any use, the American, British, and Canadian armies outran their supply lines. Gas, fuel, and munitions had to be driven from the Normandy beaches to the front line, which in some places was 400 miles distant. General Dwight D. Eisenhower, the Supreme Commander of the Allied Expeditionary Force, desperately needed to capture the Belgian port of Antwerp, Europe's largest.

Another serious problem facing the Allies was British General (later Field Marshal) Bernard L. Montgomery. Montgomery - or Monty, as he was known to the public - was Britain's most popular general as a result of his victory over German Field Marshal Erwin Rommel at El Alamein. Because Montgomery was considered a master of the "set-piece battle," Eisenhower had appointed him as the chief ground commander of the Allied forces for the duration of the Normandy campaign, with the understanding that Ike would then assume direct command on September 1, 1944.

Despite the mixed performance of Montgomery in Normandy (his British-Canadian forces had taken Caen - a D-Day objective - only after a month's worth of battles), the British general was reluctant to give up the ground forces command. Although a brilliant officer, Monty was also aloof and arrogant...and ambitious. He did not seem to understand that the Americans were fast becoming the predominant force in Western Europe, while Britain had reached the limit of her available manpower. He insisted - with the support of some of his superiors in Whitehall - that he be given command of all Allied ground forces, something that was militarily and politically unacceptable to the other partners of the coalition.

Montgomery also proposed a decisive "full-blooded thrust" to cross the Rhine River and take the Ruhr valley, Germany's industrial heartland. He proposed that Eisenhower give him command of forty divisions (pointedly excluding his American rival, Gen. George S. Patton, Jr. and his Third Army) to achieve this.

Eisenhower refused. But on Sept. 4, 1944, the British Second Army captured the port city of Antwerp. Soon after that, German V-2 rockets launched from Nazi-occupied Holland fell on London. This gave Montgomery a chance to propose a contingency plan that might, just might, lead to a bridgehead over the Rhine - and even into Germany itself.

Thus Operation Market-Garden was conceived.

Market-Garden was to be what is known as a combined-arms vertical envelopment. Market, the airborne element, involved the U.S. 82nd and 101st Airborne Divisions, the British 1st Airborne Division, and the Polish 1st Airborne Brigade. They were to be dropped - in history's largest airborne operation - in daylight onto a series of drop and landing zones near a series of bridges which linked a single highway from Eindhoven in the south to Arnhem on the Lower Rhine. Garden, the ground element, consisted of British Gen. Brian Horrocks' XXX Corps, a powerful armored force which was expected to make the 64-mile drive to Arnhem in two days. Ironically, this admittedly daring plan was the brainchild of one of the Allies' most cautious generals.

Ryan's book - later adapted by William Goldman into a screenplay for a not-too-popular movie version - describes the chain of events and tragic errors that culminated in Market-Garden's ultimate failure. A Bridge Too Far is full of episodes of skill and bravery on all fronts, but also exposes the failures of intelligence and tactical mistakes on both sides. Even 29 years after it was first published, this book remains one of the most moving and fascinating accounts about a mostly forgotten battle.


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Set the mark.

Cornelius Ryan's A Bridge Too Far set the mark impossibly high for books about Operation Market Garden. There have been several other excellent books written about this battle [Frost's A Bridge Too Many, Middlebrook's Arnhem 1944, and It Never Snows In September] but Ryan's remains just a cut above. I could not put this book down. As long as it is, I finished it in two days. Like another reviewer I knew little about the battle prior to reading this book. Had the operation been successful it would be mentioned in the same breath with Thermapolae and the Six Day War. The Allied Airborne troops displayed a level of bravery that is hard for people to comprehend today [as did the Germans.]Cornelius Ryan conveys this, and virtually every other aspect of the battle almost to perfection. If you never read any other piece of military history, read this one. I guarantee you will remember it for all time.


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ALL THE WAY...

As a Parratooper , I found that it was my duty to read this book. I am very glad that I did. I choose to read the book instead of watching the movie and I am glad that I did(the movie closely follows the book). As a memeber of the Airborne Corps, It was a honor putting those wings on my chest and looking everyday at the "All American" patch on my sleeve. Many brave men died, and the book gives great accounts of the Airborne divisions battles and the will to keep fighting. To many,it is just names on a map,Graves,Rhine.... but to many like myself whom have had the honor of meeting many of the men who where on those combat jumps, it means more to them than anything in the world...Airborne!!


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An Engrossing Account of an Over-looked Battle

I don't know about you but I really didn't know much of anything about Operation Market Garden until I read this book. It was the last of the three WWII books by Ryan that I read (the others were "The Longest Day" and "The Last Battle"). It also was and is the best of the three. There is something extra about this book that seems to bring the reader even closer to the scene of action. As usual, Cornelius Ryan does an excellent job of interviewing a wide range of participants and observers and then weaving together a story that allows us to follow the action step by step; sometimes minute by minute. Unfortunately, the author can only report history; he can't change it. Market Garden still remains a failed mission and Ryan helps us to understand just why. There is plenty of detail here but it reads like a novel rather than a history. This is as engrossing account of any event in WWII as you will find.


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reviews: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, page 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15



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