
Bloody Verrieres
The I. SS-Panzerkorps Defence of the Verrieres-Bourguebus Ridges: Volume I: Operations Goodwood and Atlantic, July 18–22, 1944
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Narrated by:
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Bruce Mann
About this listen
South of the Norman city of Caen, the twin features of the Verrieres and Bourguebus ridges were key stepping stones for the British Second Army in late July 1944. To capture this vital ground, Allied forces would have to defeat arguably the strongest German armored formation in Normandy: the I. SS-Panzerkorps "Leibstandarte." The resulting battles of late July and early August 1944 saw powerful German defensive counterattacks south of Caen inflict tremendous casualties, regain lost ground, and at times defeat Anglo-Canadian operations in detail.
These defeats and the experience of meeting an enemy with near-equal resources exposed a flawed Anglo-Canadian offensive tactical doctrine that was overly dependent on the supremacy of its artillery forces. Furthermore, weaknesses in Allied tank technology inhibited their armored forces from fighting a decisive armored battle. Confronted with the full force of the Panzerwaffe, Anglo-Canadian doctrine at times floundered. In response, the Royal Artillery and Royal Canadian Artillery units pummeled the German tankers and grenadiers, but despite their best efforts, ground could not be captured by concentrated artillery fire alone.
This is a detailed account of the success of I. SS-Panzerkorps' defensive operations, aimed at holding the Verrieres-Bourgebus ridges in late July 1944.
©2021 Arthur W. Gullachsen (P)2022 TantorA ground breaking study
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First the positive. Arthur Gullachsen's research is nothing short of phenomenal. The level of detail is astounding and the forensic comparison of previous studies, German primary sources and those of the British and Canadian forces commands deep respect. This 13 hour book covers just 4 days of combat; so one can imagine the granular detail on show. Anyone wishing to visit the area would gain a huge amount from the book. Any wargamer looking for battles or short campaigns to recreate is spoilt for choice, with not just detailed paper OOBs but very often estimates of actual force levels at key points of interest.
However, I feel this huge effort is let down badly in this audiobook. First and foremost, the superb detail is largely wasted without very detailed maps. These are battles fought largely in open countryside. The author is constantly giving detailed positions down to hamlets and small villages. I defy anyone who has not lived in the immediate area for years to understand what is going on without a thumping PDF of maps.
Second, I have to say the writing is a bit wooden, made harder by the constant detailing of units down to company and often platoon level. This is great and part of the value, but suffers from the decision to use both German spellings and rarely find a shortened version. Hence 2 Kompanie, 13th Regement, 150 Infanterie Divisione (not a real unit and maybe not the right spelling but you get the idea) is trotted out every time. Given that (I do not exaggerate) perhaps every other sentence contains the name of some unit or other, this slows the book down considerably. This might be dismissed, especially in the print version, but it is exacerbated by a further decision by the producers of the audiobook.
All of these terms are pronounced with a full German pronunciation; even names of German tanks. Hence the Panther tank is the "Paantur" and a Tiger 1 is a "Teeger one". Interestingly throughout this, all numbers are pronounced in English. This might follow from the author's decision to use German terminology, but after a while it just feels pretentious, monotonous and a bit annoying.
Finally, whilst the narrator has a clear command of the German on display, his delivery is as wooden as the writing.
All in all, this very valuable book is let down by the delivery; in the writing, the lack of maps and the audiobook production.
Sorry, Mr Gullachsen, your efforts deserve better.
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