Skip to content
DELIVERY: Please note, the Christmas deadline has now passed and we can no longer guarantee delivery before 25th December 2025.
DELIVERY: Please note, the Christmas deadline has now passed and we can no longer guarantee delivery before 25th December 2025.

Scorched Earth

Paul Thomas Chamberlin

A Global History of World War II

Barcode 9781529333848
Hardback

Original price £24.87 - Original price £24.87
Original price
£24.87
£24.87 - £24.87
Current price £24.87

Click here to join our rewards scheme and earn points on this purchase!

Availability:
Low Stock
FREE shipping

Release Date: 08/05/2025

Genre: History
Sub-Genre: Military History
Label: Basic Books
Language: English
Publisher: John Murray Press

A Global History of World War II
A radical new history of history's most brutal struggle for survival between imperial powers.

A HISTORY TODAY BOOK OF THE YEAR

'Powerful, absorbing and endlessly thought-provoking' SINCLAIR MCKAY

A radical new history of history's most brutal struggle for survival between imperial powers.

In popular memory, World War II was an unalloyed victory for freedom over totalitarianism, and democratic order over the age of empires. Scorched Earth dispatches the myth of World War II as a 'good' war. Instead, it reveals the conflict as a massive battle beset by vicious racial atrocities, fought between rival empires across huge stretches of Asia and Europe. The war was sparked by German and Japanese invasions that threatened the old powers' dominance, not by Allied opposition to fascism. The Allies achieved victory not through pluck and democratic idealism but through savage firebombing raids on civilian targets and the slaughter of millions of Soviet soldiers. The Soviet Union and the United States emerged as hyper-militarized new imperial powers, each laying claim to former Axis holdings across the globe before turning on one another and triggering a new forever war.

Dramatically rendered and persuasively argued, Scorched Earth shows that World War II marked the culmination of centuries of colonial violence and ushered in a new era of imperial struggle.