Nashville Public Librarypowered by OverDrive®
 
All formats
eBook Audio -MP3
 Video Audio - WMA
Advanced search...

OverDrive Home | OverDrive Account | My Cart | OverDrive Help | Back to Library

Click image to view full cover
The Rising Tide
World War II Series, Book 1
by 
Jeff Shaara
Paul Michael
  
Publisher: Books on Tape
Subject(s):  Fiction
Historical Fiction
Language(s):  English
Recommend this title to a friend! Click here.

Format Information

OverDrive WMA Audiobook add to cart
Available copies:  
Library copies:  
File size:   329924 KB
ISBN:   9780739346525
Release date:   Nov 07, 2006

Description

The first audiobook in a new Jeff Shaara trilogy that tells the story of the most devastating conflict of all time: WWII. After completing the Civil War trilogy his father Michael Shaara began, then writing bestselling novels about the American Revolution and World War I, Jeff is now turning to his biggest subject yet.The first Volume is THE RISING TIDE. As the curtain rises, the Nazi's have conquered Europe; only a beleagured England is holding the Nazis back. America is reluctant to become involved…until Pearl Harbor. The Greatest Generation awakens. Roosevelt must act against the axis powers. A soldier named Dwight Eisenhower is put in charge of American forces. Eisenhower and the Brits decide not to confront the Nazis in Europe in the heart of their strength but in their soft underbelly: North Africa. Finally the Germans are beaten back…Now the Nazi hold on Europe has been cracked, and a massive invasion—a fight that will turn the tide?can begin. It will take place, in book two of this trilogy, on the beaches of Normandy.

If you like this title, you might also like...

Rules of Deception
Rules of Deception
Christopher Reich
The Last Dickens
The Last Dickens
Matthew Pearl
The Steel Wave
The Steel Wave
Jeff Shaara

Excerpts

From the book

...
1. THE DESERT RAT

The Libyan Desert May 27, 1942

They huddled in the chill, encased in hard steel, waiting, energized by rumors. Behind them, to the east, the black horizon was visible, silhouetted by the first glow of sunrise. The wireless radio was chattering, the voices of nervous officers far behind the line, the men in tents, who pored over maps, unsure, powerless to do anything about an enemy who might be anywhere at all.

They had climbed into the tank at the first sign of daylight, each of the four men finding his place, their commander perched higher than the rest, settling into his seat just beneath the hatch of the turret. It was still too dark in the west, and the narrow view through the prism of the periscope was too confining, and so he stood, his head and shoulders outside the hatch. The long, thin barrel of the two-pound cannon was just below him, pointing westward, where the enemy was thought to be. He stared until his eyes watered, tried to see the horizon. But it would not be there, not yet, not until the sun had given them enough light to distinguish dull, flat ground from the empty sky.

The air was sharp and cold, but that would not last. Once the sun rose, the heat would come again, and the infantry, a mass of men waiting far behind their armor wall, would seek whatever shelter they had, waking the insects and the scorpions and the snakes. The tank was as good a shelter as a man had in the desert, but there was a price for shade. The thick steel made a perfect oven, and the men would man their posts and glance instinctively toward the hatches, hoping for the faintest wisp of breeze. He blinked, wiped his eyes with a dirty hand, annoyed at the crackling intrusion from the wireless.

"Turn that off!"

"Sir, can't do that, you know. Orders. The captain . . ."

He ignored the young man's protest, stared out again. The sun would quickly rise, nothing to block the light, no mountains, no trees, no rolling terrain. In a few short minutes he could see flecks of detail, an uneven field pockmarked by small rocks. There was a shadow, right in front of him, beneath the barrel of the two-pounder. It was his, of course, the low, hulking form of the tank. It makes us a target, he thought. But, then, the Germans are in the west, will have to attack straight into the rising sun. We'll be able to see them first, certainly. Stupid tactic. But what isn't stupid out here? Sitting in a fat tin can, armed with a two-pound pop gun, hoping like hell we see him before he sees us.

There was a loud squawk from the wireless.

"Dammit, at least turn that thing down!"

"Sir, I think it's Captain Digby. He's upset about something."

Digby. He stared at the horizon, clear, distinct, thought of the officer who sat sucking on that idiotic pipe. His tank smells like a Turkish whorehouse. And he's upset. Good. Bloody fool. Carries fat rolls of maps so he can find his way. In a place with no landmarks, no signposts. Stuffs the damned maps into his ammo holders, and so, he runs out of ammo. Begs the rest of us for help. Just look at the sun, Captain. All the signpost you need.

The radio squawked again, and he heard the voice now. Yep. Digby.

"Rec report . . . enemy in motion . . . zzzzzzzzz . . . two hundred . . . zzzzzzzz." The wireless seemed to go dead, and he looked to the north, could see the British tanks in a ragged line. The crews had climbed into their vehicles, and most of the tank commanders were standing up, searching for something across the vast emptiness. He still looked to the north, thought, yep, there's Digby. The sixth tank over. Brew yourself a cup of tea, Captain. There's nothing out here...
 

Reviews

George McGovern...
"This is Jeff Shaara at his best, giving us another superb historically grounded novel of one of the most dramatic struggles of World War II."
 
Publishers Weekly (starred review)...
"The wonderful first volume of a planned trilogy . . . Shaara evokes the agony of desert warfare and the utter chaos of an airborne assault. . . . [A] sprawling, masterful opening act."
 
General Tommy R. Franks...
"A gripping account of World War I."
 
John Mosier, author of The Myth of the Great War...
"[To the Last Man is] the best novel about the Great War since Remarque's All Quiet on the Western Front, which it greatly surpasses in depth, scope, and intensity."
 

Digital Rights Information

OverDrive WMA Audiobook
Burn to CD: Not permitted
 
Transfer to device: Permitted (3 times)
   Transfer to Apple® device: Permitted
 
Public performance: Not permitted
File-sharing: Not permitted
Peer-to-peer usage: Not permitted
 
All copies of this title, including those transferred to portable devices and other media, must be deleted/destroyed at the end of the lending period.
 


IMPORTANT NOTICE ABOUT COPYRIGHTED MATERIALS