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The World War II Odyssey of the 10th Mountain Division, America's Elite Alpine Warriors
June 1, 2019
During World War II, the German army had several capable, battle-toughened mountain divisions, which in 1943 helped stop the Allied advance in the Italian campaign. In response, the U.S. Army built the 10th Mountain Division, drawing on Olympic skiers, mountaineers, park rangers, outdoorsy Ivy Leaguers, and European refugees, who together helped lead the Allies to victory in Italy. With a 35,000-copy first printing.
Copyright 2019 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
September 15, 2019
A pioneering military unit's history, culminating in its breaking the German hold on Italy's mountains during World War II. Isserman (American History/Hamilton Coll.; Continental Divide: A History of American Mountaineering, 2017, etc.) traces the story of the 10th Mountain Division from its inception at a meeting of four skiers in 1940, when Finnish ski troops were resisting the invading Germans. One of them, Charles Minot Dole, decided to take the idea of training and equipping an American ski regiment. At first met with indifference, he managed to convince the War Department to take the idea seriously. The Army set up a training facility in mountain country and began to recruit trained skiers to man the new unit. Eventually, the training camp was located at Camp Hale in the Colorado Rockies, and the soldiers also took lessons in mountain climbing. At first, there was no obvious mission for the 10th Mountain. A mission to the Aleutian Island of Kiska turned out to be a fiasco when the Japanese occupiers evacuated before the U.S. troops arrived. Men were transferring to other units in order to find combat somewhere. It wasn't until late in the war--December 1944--that the stalled front in the Italian mountains presented a perfect spot for their skills. While the Germans were already in retreat elsewhere in Europe, Hitler ordered them to hold the line in Italy. The 10th Mountain took the critical peaks and ridges to which they were sent; they also endured heavy casualties in the process. Isserman draws on the division's extensive archives, including personal accounts by many of the surviving soldiers. He focuses on several individuals from their induction to the end of the war, giving the book the feel of an old war movie with a cast drawn from all parts of the country. The division's long time in training makes the narrative a slow build, but once the 10th Mountain gets to Italy, there's plenty of payoff. A solid military history focused on an elite division that made its mark in the final stages of World War II.
COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
October 21, 2019
Hamilton College history professor Isserman (Continental Divide) chronicles the U.S. Army’s first mountaineering unit from inception to its decisive role in the Allied invasion of Italy in this exhilarating account. Inspired by the “hit-and-run attacks” Finnish ski troops launched against Soviet forces, National Ski Patrol System founder Charles Minot “Minnie” Dole believed that specially trained mountain soldiers could help protect North America from Nazi invasion. He prodded President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Army chief of staff Gen. George C. Marshall, and other military leaders to train and deploy such a force. Thousands of recruits, including mountain climbers, forest rangers, and Ivy League skiers, underwent rigorous training in Washington State and the Colorado Rockies before being shipped to Italy, where they broke through Germany’s defensive line in the North Apennine mountains. Drawing from letters sent by 10th Mountain Division soldiers to family and friends back home, Isserman provides frontline views of such famous battles as Riva Ridge and Mt. Belvedere, and relates how the unit’s veterans took part in the postwar rise of the American ski industry. The result is an entertaining, well-sourced blend of military and sports history. Agent: Sandra Dijkstra, Sandra Dijkstra Literary Agency
November 1, 2019
Isserman (Fallen Giants) combines his interests in World War II and mountaineering by chronicling the creation and deployment of the 10th Mountain Division during WWII. While the war in Europe seldom entered the mountains, the creation of a division that would be expert in skiing and mountain climbing seemed essential to Americans with knowledge of the Nazi offenses in Norway. Convincing the War Department that mountain troops would benefit the war effort was an uphill battle. The Division was created in 1941, but it was several years before the troops were sent to the European theater. The bulk of Isserman's text recounts the creation and training of the mountain troops, including the recruitment of wealthy white Americans who were already experienced skiers or climbers. The last part of the book chronicles the battles that the 10th Mountain Division engaged in during the final months of the war. While the deeply entrenched Nazi army in the Apennine Mountains continued to offer resistance to Allied forces, the perseverance of the mountain troops proved their creation was worth the effort. VERDICT This work will appeal to World War II buffs and fans of nonfiction adventure or sports.--Danielle Williams, Univ. of Evansville
Copyright 2019 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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