It is the middle of January and I have finally found time to
start writing my annual summary of the best books from the past year. As in past years, I have read a lot of good
books this year. I plan to divide these
posts into three groups again – history/biography books, ministry-oriented
books and fiction books.
Here is my description of the best history/biography books I
read this year, followed by a list of the others I finished during 2022.
Stalin’s War: A
New History of World War II by Sean McMeekin. This is a truly
remarkable, eye-opening
book. McMeekin’s argument is that
Stalin, not Hitler, was the prime driver behind World War 2. The author details how Stalin manipulated
Hitler to bring about war, and then when Hitler turned on him, how he made
himself the darling of the West.
McMeekin details the necessity and excesses of the Lend Lease program
and the extent to which the US went to continue to supply the Russians with raw
materials and manufactured goods which enabled them to get a jump on the Cold
War.
Island Infernos:
The US Army’s Pacific War Odyssey, 1944 by John C. McManus. This is McManus’ second book in a three-part
series on the US Army in the Pacific during World War 2. Like the previous book, it is amazingly well
written and researched. McManus unpacks
the Army’s role in places like Saipan, Guam, New Guinea and Leyte Island in the
Philippines and he does not shy away from addressing the Marine Corps’ bias
against the Army by some of its leadership.
Intellectuals: From
Marx and Tolstoy to Sartre and Chomsky
by Paul Johnson. Another absolutely
fascinating book. Johnson details the
life of intellectual after intellectual who each made absolute claims about how
society should operate and how others should live. But when their own lives are examined, they
are exposed for the hypocrites that they truly were. One wonders who would star in such a book if
it was written about today’s intellectual class.
A War of Empires:
Japan, India, Burma & Britain, 1941-45 by Robert Lyman. The CBI or China-Burma-India theater of World
War 2 is often overlooked. But the fact
is, Allied troops fought the Japanese longer there than any other place in the
Pacific War. Lyman focuses our attention
on this theater and especially on the struggles and subsequent triumphs of the
Indian Army soldiers which made up the bulk of the troops.
Victory at Sea:
Naval Power and the Transformation of the Global Order in World War 2
by Paul Kennedy. Kennedy’s book is a high-level
study of the navies of World War 2. He
focuses on the changes in the global world order as some navies who entered the
war eroded or were destroyed, while others like the US Navy displayed
remarkable growth. It is a fascinating
synthesis made better by some great naval art by artist Ian Marshall.
July 1914:
Countdown to War by Sean McMeekin.
You might start noticing a theme here.
This is a Sean McMeekin year.
After reading Stalin’s War, I sought out other McMeekin books. This volume is about the political and
diplomatic machinations that brought about World War 1. Blunders and miscommunication abound
everywhere, and while blaming Austria as well as Germany, McMeekin brings the
pivotal roles of Russian, France and Britain to the fore as well. Bottom line – no one comes out looking good
here.
The Russian Revolution:
A New History by Sean McMeekin.
One more McMeekin book. This is a
very readable account of how the Russian revelation came about. He brings out how fragile and risky Lenin’s
position really was at the beginning.
The book is rather grim in spots, and McMeekin does not shy away from
the horror of Communist rule or the guilt belonging to other nations in allowing
the revolution to begin and continue to its end.
Other excellent books I read:
Brothers in
Arms: One Legendary Tank Regiment’s
Bloody War from D-Day to VE-Day by James Holland
Poland
1939: The Outbreak of World War 2 by
Roger Moorhouse
Maverick: A Biography of Thomas Sowell by Jason L.
Riley
Operation
Pedestal: The Fleet and Battled to
Malta, 1942 by Max Hastings
The Greek
Revolution: 1821 and the Making of
Modern Europe by Mark Mazower
Island of the
Blue Foxes: Disaster and Triumph on the
World’s Greatest Scientific Expedition by Stephen R. Bown
Fears of a
Setting Sun: The Disillusionment of
America’s Founders by Dennis C. Rasmussen
The Last Emperor
of Mexico by Edward Shawcross
The White
Ship: Conquest, Anarchy and the Wrecking
of Henry I’s Dream by Charles Spencer
Thaddeus
Stevens: Civil War Revolutionary,
Fighter for Racial Justice by Bruce Levine
River of the
Gods: Genius, Courage and Betrayal in
the Search for the Source of the Nile by Candice Millard
Agent
Sonya: The Spy Next Door by Ben
MacIntyre
Icebound: Shipwrecked at the Edge of the World by
Andrea Pitzer
The Last
Battle: When US and German Soldiers
joined forces in the Waning Hours of World War II in Europe by Stephen
Harding
The Red
Prince: John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster
by Helen Carr
Salmon P.
Chase: Lincoln’s Vital Rival by
Walter Stahr
Shadow
Man: An Elusive Psycho Killer and the
Birth of FBI Profiling by Ron Franscell
Who Can Hold
the Sea: The US Navy in the Cold War,
1945-1960 by James Hornfischer
Rebels at
Sea: Privateering in the American
Revolution by Eric Jay Dolin
Path Lit by
Lightning: The Life of Jim Thorpe by
David Maraniss
Everest
1922: The Epic Story of the First
Attempt on the World’s Highest Mountain by Mick Conefrey
Together We
Stand: North Africa 1942-1943: Turning the Tide in the West by James
Holland
Blood and
Smoke: A True Tale of Mystery, Mayhem
and the Birth of the Indy 500 by Charles Leerhsen
The
Revolutionary Samuel Adams by Stacy Schiff
George V: Never a Dull Moment by Jane Ridley
A Man of
Iron: The Turbulent Life and Improbable
Presidency of Grover Cleveland by
Troy Senik
The Last
Campaign: Sherman, Geronimo and the War
for America by H. W. Brands
A Fire in the
Wilderness: The First Battle between
Ulysses S. Grant and Robert E. Lee by John Reeves
And a few that were somewhat disappointing:
Eight Days in
May: The Final Collapse of the Third
Reich by Volker Ullrich
All Roads Led
to Gettysburg: A New Look at the Civil
War’s Pivotal Campaign by Troy D. Harman