Ratings7
Average rating4.6
Around Thanksgiving, 1950, while the rest of the country paid as little attention as possible, units of the Second Infantry Division were virtually annihilated by forces of the People’s Republic Army. It was a defeat which shocked an otherwise disinterested and distant nation. In The Coldest Winter, award-winning reporter and historian David Halberstam explodes this moment in time, using it as a jumping off point to delve into the Korean War’s particular horrors and triumphs. Using first-person interviews and detailed historical research, Halberstam exposes the truth about this underreported war by examining the geopolitics involved and also showing it from the vantage of the men whose poor fortune it was to be on history’s cutting edge. The book contains portrayals of ordinary soldiers as well as of McArthur, Eisenhower, and other major players.
Reviews with the most likes.
A huge gap in my understanding of events that greatly influenced the american politics of my formative years has been filled in.
This, along with Washington's Crossing, is one of my favorite war books. I found the politics of MacArthur and Almond fascinating, but that aside, I feel like this book gave me an incredible sense of what it might have been like to ‘be there'–or it at least came as close as possible for something as remote and foreign to me as war. It flowed extremely well, switching between historical context and explanations of what the soldiers may have been thinking almost imperceptibly.
Books
9 booksIf you enjoyed this book, then our algorithm says you may also enjoy these.