Then Ambrose discussed a number of briefings the military had experienced before invasion and launch and then wrote about the process that General Eisenhower decided to begin invasion. When the real invasion begins, Ambrose uses the oral history of men at Utah Beach and Omaha Beach to talk about the progress of the day. The end of the book introduces the behavior of British and Canadian at Golden beach, Sword beach, and British airborne troops.
In this topic we will use books such as D-Day: The Greatest Invasion, People's History of Dan van der Vat, Steel Inferno of Michael Reynolds. I will also use the Climax of World War II, D Day of Stephen E. Ambrose on June 6, 1944. Also, I plan to use Omaha Beach of Adrian R. Lewis. In addition to Allied success, this will give me another view on D Day events. In the Second World War in Europe, the Soviet Union was on the verge of failure. Joseph Stalin demanded another ally to open another front on the west side. Other allies saw the very urgency and importance of this problem. They answered the invasion of Normandy
June 6, 1944 D - day: The climax of World War II was written by Stephen E. Ambrose and published by Simon and Shooter in New York. This book begins with a preface, followed by Chapter 32, vocabulary, endnotes, bibliography, appendix, and index. In the first 10 chapters we will introduce the activities that have reached D Day. It discusses various topics from common topics such as attackers and defenders to topics such as weather conditions for intrusion. In chapters 11 to 14, an airstrike occurred shortly after midnight, and an air strike and a bombardment to the beach were carried out before infantry landed on the Normandy coast. Chapters 15 to 25 explain the landing to the beach and the fighting of the U.S. military in the uprising and the inland area. Chapter 26 entitled "Breathing of the World", it is exactly what it is saying, and it gives a front view of the family during the invasion.