Author: Cornelius Ryan
Author Signed: N
Publisher: Simon & Schuster New York
Edition:
Cover: H/D
ISBN: 1974
Synopsis: Cornelius Ryan's meticulously researched masterpiece chronicles one of World War II's most ambitious and ultimately tragic military operations: Operation Market Garden. In September 1944, Allied forces launched a bold plan to end the war by Christmas through a massive airborne assault in the Netherlands. The operation involved dropping 35,000 paratroopers behind German lines to capture key bridges leading into Germany's industrial heartland. Ryan, drawing from hundreds of interviews with survivors from both sides, reconstructs the nine-day battle with remarkable detail and human insight. The book reveals how overconfidence, intelligence failures, and communication breakdowns doomed what could have been a war-ending victory. Through personal accounts of soldiers, civilians, and commanders, Ryan shows how the operation's complexity made it vulnerable to the smallest miscalculations. The title refers to the final bridge at Arnhem, where British paratroopers made their heroic last stand against overwhelming German forces. The book demonstrates how the operation's failure prolonged the war and cost thousands of lives, yet also showcases extraordinary examples of courage and sacrifice. Ryan's narrative style brings readers into the chaos of battle while maintaining the broader strategic perspective. The work stands as both a gripping war story and a cautionary tale about military hubris. It examines how weather, terrain, enemy resistance, and logistical challenges combined to defeat even the best-laid plans. The book particularly highlights the experiences of ordinary soldiers caught in extraordinary circumstances, from the initial optimism of the drops to the desperate evacuation across the Rhine. Ryan's balanced approach presents German defenders not as caricatures but as professional soldiers doing their duty. The work influenced subsequent military thinking about airborne operations and remains a classic study of military planning and execution. Its themes of courage under fire, the fog of war, and the human cost of strategic decisions resonate beyond military history. The book's detailed reconstruction of events, based on extensive research in archives and personal accounts, set new standards for military historical writing and established Ryan as one of the premier war correspondents turned historians of his generation.
A Bridge Too Far, is one of the many primary source materials in the Army Air Corps Museum collection.
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