Robert Lynn Fuller holds a PhD in history from the University of Virginia. He is the author of The Struggle for Cooperation: Liberated France and the American Military, 1944-1946.
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Description
This remarkable and well-researched book fills a gap in the already heavily documented history of the liberation of France in 1944 by analyzing how the French people were affected by the military action. Fuller uses French works that have never been translated into English, along with extensive government reports from numerous obscure archives, to add an important new dimension to English versions of the war in Europe. While many books recite statistics on the heavy damage the bombing, shelling, and fighting imposed on France--whole villages and towns demolished, hundreds of thousands of civilian casualties and persons displaced, important infrastructure destroyed--Fuller makes all of this much more immediate through his copious use of individual accounts to flesh out these statistics. He tells us who has been hurt or killed or deprived of a livelihood during a particular raid or bombardment, and what happened to particular localities and to infrastructure, thus explaining much about how the French viewed the Allied invasion and its aftermath.--Charles L. Robertson, author of "When Roosevelt Planned to Govern France"

