**Please note: Books shown in this display are not currently housed in the McWherter alcove per usual; please contact the Check Out Desk at lib_circ@memphis.edu or by phone at 901.678.2205 if you are interested in checking out a title.

We're remembering the stories, heroes, sacrifices, tragedies, and victory of World War II throughout the month of June. This anniversary month of the D-Day Invasion on the beaches of Normandy marked the full military arrival of U.S. troops on European soil, leading to the liberation of Western Europe and the eventual end of the war.
A Bridge Too Far
by
Cornelius Ryan
Summary: Reviews the individuals, tactics, and events involved in Field Marshal Bernard Law Montgomery's plan to end World War II.
The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich
by
William L. Shirer
Summary: The rise and fall of the Third Reich offers an examination of how Adolf Hitler nearly succeeded in conquering the world. Shirer's account of the pivotal characters and events of that critical era benefits from his many years as a reporter and his own personal recollections, as well as from the mass of historical documents retrieved from the German Foreign Office. The result is this account of how Hitler wrested political control of Germany and managed to take the country with him on his mad six-year quest for world domination, only to see it go down in flames in the end.
Gone to Soldiers
by
Marge Piercy
The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich
by
William L. Shirer
Summary: The rise and fall of the Third Reich offers an examination of how Adolf Hitler nearly succeeded in conquering the world. Shirer's account of the pivotal characters and events of that critical era benefits from his many years as a reporter and his own personal recollections, as well as from the mass of historical documents retrieved from the German Foreign Office. The result is this account of how Hitler wrested political control of Germany and managed to take the country with him on his mad six-year quest for world domination, only to see it go down in flames in the end.