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Thought provoking but controversial and dubious.
Doesn't deliver what's promisedThat promise is never delivered on. The writing style is merely passable. After a few false starts, the book goes into a very long digression into German and Nazi history which has nothing to do with the book topic.
The author constantly belittles Churchill as the self-indulgent imperialistic "old bulldog," "that damned warmonger at 10 Downing Street." Yet while the author once calls Hitler a "demon," Hitler is virtually praised as the misunderstood hope of a unified Germany, a man who by May 1941 had reached as far geographically as he wanted -- a man who only bombed London in an attempt to reach peace with England, and who was willing to give up France if England would only agree to peace. The holocaust? Why, blame that on Churchill -- the holocaust was started when Germany was tricked into invading Russia.
Why did Hitler invade Russia? The author can't make up his mind. Sometimes the reason for the Russian invasion is to convince England that Hitler's desire for peace with England is sincere, and other times Hitler was tricked into invading Russian because there was ALREADY a de facto peace treaty between Germany and England reached in May 1941. Somehow thrown into the mix is that by reaching peace with Germany and encouraging Hitler's invasion of Russia, this would force the U.S. to come into the war.
Whether Hess' flight into Scotland to meet the supposed leader of the British "Peace Party" came out of Hess' deluded mind, or was a secret mission from Hitler, that surely doesn't translate into either a "secret peace" or an intention on Churchill's part to cause Hitler to invade Russia.
Uneven, unconvincing, superficial

Something isn't right here
I'm sure the author could have done better
Where's the beef?

it is a very interesting book

Finally!

Not A Good Purchase For Me

Vol.16: Johnny Shadow, Dick Masters, etc."The Prisoners Of Lazareth" & "Penetrating Heaven" by Jon Macy are intriguing stories involving aliens from space and demons of hell-- I just wish the artwork lived up to the writing. "Heavy Loads" by Joe involves truckers; Joe's overly-muscled art is very "cleanly" rendered, though the drawing is far better than the visual storytelling. "Murphy's Manor" by Kurt Erichsen features cute, cartoony art & thoughtful, fun writing. "Johnny Shadow" by John Blackburn is, to date, the ONLY story I've seen him do with a hero other than his blonde character, Coley-- though the difference isn't that noticeable. "Friends" featured "Jack Masters Private Dick" by Joven in a case involving gay-bashing. "Rapid Shooters" by Sean has a group of guys wild-river rafting together (clothing optional). And "Jayson's Dream Man" is another installment in Jeffrey A. Krell's humorous sitcom-like series. Also worth a look is "Broc Of The Stone Age", a silent story all told in full-page panels by "Mike", whose rendering is far better than his actual drawing (the linework is very refined, but his human figures all have extremely distorted, exaggerated anatomy-- funny enough, his dinosaurs look fine!). Gerald Donelan contributes 12 of his light-hearted cartoons this time.
As usual, this series continues to feature a mix of good and really below-average work. As a forum for "up-and-coming" talent that's to be applauded; I just wish the format didn't make such a mixed product so pricey!


Obsessive violence

Good only for the very beginner

Not a good choice for learning painter
Half hearted effort & a CD that's worse than useless.
150 pages into the book and CD missing images in tutorial.

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Not by Sir Winston