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9 pages in length. Books about World War II are plentiful and comprehensive; no matter what aspect of the great war one might want to know about, there is a publication that covers it ad infinitum. The function that Stephen E. Ambrose and Gerald F. Linderman delve into in their books entitled Citizen Soldiers : The U S Army From the Normandy Beaches to the Bulge to the Surrender of Germany and Gerald F. Linderman's The World Within War: America's Combat Experience in World War II is that of the human element, bringing to light the factors of emotions, feelings, personal conflict and every other human sensation soldiers experienced during wartime. No additional sources cited.
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9 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCComparWar.rtf
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INTRODUCTION Books about World War II are plentiful and comprehensive; no matter what aspect of the great war one might want to know about, there is a publication that covers
it ad infinitum. The function that Stephen E. Ambrose delves into in his book entitled Citizen Soldiers : The U S Army From the Normandy Beaches to the Bulge
to the Surrender of Germany is that of the human element, bringing to light the factors of emotions, feelings, personal conflict and every other human sensation soldiers experienced during wartime.
Indeed, this perspective is not merely a small portion of the book, inasmuch as so many other World War II publications include this requisite component as more of an
obligation than a meaningful insight, but rather the focus of the entire account of personal occurrences. Gerald F. Lindermans The World Within War: Americas Combat Experience in World War II
espouses many of the same sentiments toward human value during wartime escapades as does Ambrose; the extent to which he concentrates on the psychological disintegration of soldiers trying to cope
is captured with extraordinary realism through the mounds of letters, diaries, memoirs and surveys he employs. For Linderman (1997), the human element is far more important from a battle
standpoint for its residual impact it has long after war has ended. II. AMBROSE Ambrose (1998) illustrates how weapons and equipment used
to carry out the invasion included tanks and trench warfare, the latter of which appeared - on the drawing board at least - to be a most applicable means by
which to render attack on the enemy. However, what ensued was not so much of a protecting agent as one that gave cause for significant anxiety, pain and unmitigated
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