8/8: The Savage Storm: The Battle for Italy 1943 by James Holland (Author)
The John Batchelor Show
John Batchelor
4.5 • 2.8K Ratings
🗓️ 13 January 2024
⏱️ 6 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
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Summary
https://www.amazon.com/Savage-Storm-Battle-Italy-1943/dp/080216160X
Following victory in Sicily, while the central command planned the spring 1944 invasion of France, Allied troops crossed into southern Italy in September 1943, expecting to drive Axis forces north and liberate Rome by Christmas. Italy quickly surrendered but German divisions fiercely resisted, and the hoped-for quick victory descended into one of the most challenging and protracted battles of the entire war.
James Holland’s The Savage Storm, chronicling the dramatic opening months of the Italian Campaign in unflinching and insightful detail, is unlike any campaign history yet written. Holland has always narrated war at ground level, but here goes further by chronicling events almost entirely through the contemporary eyes of those who were there on all sides and at all levels—Allied, Axis, civilians alike. Weaving together a wealth of letters, diaries, and other documents—from the likes of American General Mark Clark, German battalion commander Georg Zellner, New Zealand lance-corporal Roger Smith, legendary war reporter Ernie Pyle, and Italian politician Filippo Caracciolo—Holland traces the battles as they were experienced across plains, over mountains, through shattered villages and cities, in intense heat and, towards the end of December 1943, frigid cold and relentless rain.
Such close-up views persuade Holland to recast important aspects of the campaign, reappraising the reputation of Mark Clark himself and other senior commanders of the U.S. Fifth and British Eighth armies. Given the shortage of Allied shipping and materiel allocated to Italy because of the build-up for D-Day, more was expected of Allied troops in Italy than anywhere else, and, as accounts at the time attest, a huge price was paid by everyone for each bloodily contested mile. Putting readers vividly in the moment as events unfolded, with characters made unforgettable by their own words, The Savage Storm is a defining account of the pivotal months leading to Monte Cassino, and a landmark in the writing about war.
may 1944 Northamptonshire Regiment
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | I'm John Batcha with James Holland. |
| 0:06.0 | His new book is The Savage Storm, The Battle for Italy, |
| 0:08.7 | 1943. |
| 0:10.6 | It is Christmas, 1943 a and all of the players' diaries are intact |
| 0:17.0 | except for those who are KIA or WIA, |
| 0:21.0 | and ahead of them is a nightmare. And we need to build the nightmare because that comes |
| 0:26.8 | next in James's presentation, the next book or whatever book it comes. I want to get to to Rome but we're well short of Rome right now |
| 0:36.0 | and above them all the lary valley that they've penetrated through is |
| 0:41.2 | Monte Cassino what What is that, James? Well, Monte Cassino is the |
| 0:46.0 | is a little sort of mountain massive which runs down to a little kind of sort of |
| 0:49.8 | peak and a little point that sticks out over the Leary Valley which is this sort of valley floor, |
| 0:56.4 | wide valley floor which is basically the route up to Rome and along which the Via |
| 1:01.7 | Casaina, the Highway 6, runs from Naples all the way to the Eternal City. |
| 1:07.0 | But right at the edge of this massive is a Benedictine Monstree which was Abbey which was bounded in the sixth century by |
| 1:17.0 | St Benedict and it's still there and it towers over the Nury Valley and over the town of Casino which lies at the foot of the mountains below. |
| 1:27.0 | And it's an obvious strong point because it overlooks the, it overlooks the valley below and particularly the road which hugs the mountains on that side of the valley. |
| 1:36.0 | And of course again, you know, the Germans are there and they've got observers up there |
| 1:39.0 | and they make this the absolute kind of sort of bulwark of the next defensive line the Gustav |
| 1:44.2 | line which follows the the cracking open of the Bernhard line, the winter line, which |
| 1:48.2 | the Americans managed to prize open with the support of the British late December 1943. |
| 1:55.0 | So having got through this terrible battle from kind of, you know, back end of, |
| 2:01.0 | from the beginning of November, two months worth of trying |
... |
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