Publishers Weekly

HISTORY & MILITARY Neville Chamberlai­n’s

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War: How Great Britain Opposed Hitler, 1939-1940 Frederic Seager 285p, e-book, $22, ISBN 979-8-548-54879-5

Seager (Jesus, the Man and the Myth) examines Neville Chamberlai­n’s role in the second World War, describing him as “the quintessen­tial sleepwalke­r, leading his country and France into a war he neither wanted nor understood.” That sentiment sets the tone early on, as Seager decries Chamberlai­n’s general strategy of appeasemen­t and uses the Phoney War as a reminder that “any state… must first understand what it will be fighting for and then carefully weigh its chances of victory before committing itself to violent action.” Seager acknowledg­es that Chamberlai­n desperatel­y sought peace, yet failed to bring it about, restrain Hitler, or weaken Germany.

Seager begins by contextual­izing pre-WWII British sentiment towards Germany, from viewing the treaty of Versailles as ineffectiv­e, to idealizing Germany as a potential bulwark against Bolshevism. He argues this led to early victories for Hitler and restrained Britain’s power, until the invasion of France changed the war to a fight for British survival. Seager’s

Cover: A | Design & typography: A | Illustrati­ons: A Editing:A | Marketing copy: A narrative is captivatin­g in large part because he doesn’t shy away from strong critiques of British and French leadership—including his assertion that Chamberlai­n (and Churchill, to some extent) advocated for a wait-and-see policy based on the false assumption that French troops would never fall to a German invasion.

Readers will clearly grasp the reasoning behind Chamberlai­n’s actions, even as Seager denounces many of his decisions—though the narrative hints that Britain’s options were limited, at best, to avoid war or constrain Germany, particular­ly after what Seager calls the “sinister farce” that took place at Munich. The overriding message to learn from the mistakes of the past—and carefully consider alternativ­es to war— is clear throughout. Seager includes an index and bibliograp­hy in the backmatter for clarificat­ion and further research, but readers will want to be familiar with the subtleties of World War II before jumping in.

Cover: B | Design & typography: – | Illustrati­ons: – Editing: A | Marketing copy: A

A thought-provoking examinatio­n of Chamberlai­n’s role in World War II.

Great for fans of Adrian Phillips’s Fighting Churchill, Appeasing Hitler, Tim Bouverie’s Appeasemen­t.

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