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Savage Continent: Europe in the Aftermath of World War II Paperback – July 2, 2013
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Winner of the PEN Hessell-Tiltman Prize
"A superb and immensely important book."―Jonathan Yardley, The Washington Post
The Second World War might have officially ended in May 1945, but in reality it rumbled on for another ten years...
The end of World War II in Europe is remembered as a time when cheering crowds filled the streets, but the reality was quite different. Across Europe, landscapes had been ravaged, entire cities razed, and more than thirty million people had been killed in the war. The institutions that we now take for granted―such as police, media, transport, and local and national government―were either entirely absent or compromised. Crime rates soared, economies collapsed, and whole populations hovered on the brink of starvation.
In Savage Continent, Keith Lowe describes a continent where individual Germans and collaborators were rounded up and summarily executed, where concentration camps were reopened, and violent anti-Semitism was reborn. In some of the monstrous acts of ethnic cleansing the world has ever seen, tens of millions were expelled from their ancestral homelands.
Savage Continent is the story of post–war Europe, from the close of the war right to the establishment of an uneasy stability at the end of the 1940s. Based principally on primary sources from a dozen countries, Savage Continent is the chronicle of a world gone mad, the standard history of post–World War II Europe for years to come.
- Print length496 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherPicador
- Publication dateJuly 2, 2013
- Dimensions6.2 x 0.85 x 9.15 inches
- ISBN-109781250033567
- ISBN-13978-1250033567
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Editorial Reviews
Review
“A superb and immensely important book.” ―The Washington Post
“A breathtaking, numbing account of the physical and moral desolation that plagued Europe in the late 1940s. Authoritative but never dry, stripping away soothing myths of national unity and victimhood, this is a painful but necessary historical task superbly done.” ―Kirkus Reviews
“Lowe's work, thoroughly researched and written with scrupulous objectivity, promises to be the year's best book on European history.” ―Financial Times (London)
“Deeply harrowing. Moving, measured, and provocative. A compelling picture of a continent physically and morally brutalized by slaughter.” ―The Sunday Times (London)
“A graphic and chilling account of the murderous vengeance, terroristic reprisals, and ferocious ethnic cleansing that gripped Europe following--and often as a direct continuation of--the Second World War. Keith Lowe's excellent book paints a little-known and frightening picture of a continent in the embrace of lawlessness, chaos, and unconstrained violence.” ―Ian Kershaw, author of The End: The Defiance and Destruction of Hitler's Germany, 1944–1945
“Savage Continent is a powerful and disturbing book, painstakingly researched and written with both authority and an impressive historical sweep.” ―James Holland, author of Italy's Sorrow and The Battle of Britain
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Savage Continent
Europe in the Aftermath of World War II
By Lowe Keith, Keith LowePicador
Copyright © 2013 Lowe KeithAll rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-250-03356-7
Excerpt
Savage ContinentPART IThe Legacy of WarI thought you'd be there waiting for me ... What greeted me instead was the lingering stench of ashes and the empty sockets of our ruined home.Samuel Puterman on his return to Warsaw, 19451;2
We could see the physical destruction but the effect of vast economic disruption and political, social, and psychological destruction ... completely escaped us.Dean Acheson, US Under-Secretary of State, 19471Physical DestructionIn 1943 the travel book publisher Karl Baedeker produced a guide to the Generalgouvernement -- that part of central and southern Poland that remained nominally separate from the Reich. As with all publications in Germany at the time, it was just as concerned with disseminating propaganda as with giving its readers information. The section on Warsaw was a case in point. The book waxed lyrical about the city's German origins, its German character and the way that it had become one of the world's great capitals 'predominantly through the effort of Germans'. It urged tourists to visit the medieval Royal Castle, the fourteenth-century cathedral and the beautiful late-Renaissance Jesuit Church - all the products of German culture and influence. Of special interest was the complex of late baroque palaces around Pilsudski Square - 'the most beautiful square in Warsaw' - now renamed Adolf Hitler Platz. The centrepiece was the 'Saxon' Palace, built of course by a German, and its beautiful Saxon Gardens, which were again designed by German architects. The travel guide conceded that one or two buildings had unfortunately been damaged by the battle for Warsaw in 1939, but since then, it reassured its readers, Warsaw 'is being rebuilt once more under German leadership'.1No mention was made of the western suburbs of the city, which had been converted into a ghetto for Jews. This was probably just as well because even as the book was being published an uprising broke out here, obliging SS-Brigadeführer Jürgen Stroop to set fire to virtually every house in the district.2 Almost four square kilometres of the city were entirely destroyed in this way.The following year a second uprising broke out throughout the rest of the city. This time it was a more general insurgency inspired by thePolish Home Army. In August 1944, groups of Polish men, women and teenagers began ambushing German soldiers and stealing their weapons and ammunition. For the next two months they barricaded themselves in and around the Old City, and held down more than 17,000 German anti-insurgent troops.3 The uprising only came to an end in October after some of the most brutal fighting of the war. Afterwards, tired of Polish disobedience, and aware that the Russians were about to enter the city anyway, Hitler ordered the city to be completely razed.4Accordingly, German troops blew up the medieval Royal Castle that had so impressed Baedeker. They undermined the fourteenth-century cathedral and blew that up too. Then they destroyed the Jesuit Church. The Saxon Palace was systematically blown up over the course of three days just after Christmas 1944, as was the entire complex of baroque and rococo palaces. The European Hotel, recommended by Baedeker, was first burned down in October and then, just to make sure, blown up in January 1945. German troops went from house to house, street to street, systematically destroying the entire city: 93 per cent of Warsaw's dwellings were destroyed or damaged beyond repair. To complete the destruction they burned down the National Archive, the Archives of Ancient Documents, the Financial Archives, the Municipal Archives, the Archives of New Documents and the Public Library.5After the war, when the Poles were turning their thoughts to rebuilding their capital, the National Museum held an exhibition showing fragments of buildings and artworks that had been damaged or destroyed during the German occupation. They produced an accompanying guide book, which, unlike Baedeker's guide book, was written entirely in the past tense. The intention was to remind the people of Warsaw, and the wider world, of exactly what had been lost. There is a realization implicit in both the guide book and the exhibition itself that those who lived through the destruction of Warsaw were no longer able to appreciate the immensity of what had happened to their city. For them it had happened gradually, beginning with the bombardment in 1939, continuing with German looting during the occupation and ending with the destruction of the Ghetto in 1943 and the final devastation in late 1944. Now, just a few months after their liberation, they had become used to living in shells of houses, surrounded on all sides by mountains of rubble.6In some ways the true scale of the destruction could be appreciatedonly by those who saw its results without actually witnessing it taking place. John Vachon was a young photographer who came to Warsaw as part of the United Nations relief effort after the war. The letters he wrote to his wife Penny in January 1946 display his complete incomprehension at the scale of the destruction.This is really an incredible city and I want to give you an idea of it, and don't know how I can do it. It's a big city, see. Over one million pre war. Big as Detroit. Now it is 90 per cent all destroyed ... Wherever you walk here it is hunks of buildings standing up without roofs or much sides, and people living in them. Except the Ghetto, where it is just a great plain of bricks, with twisted beds and bath tubs and sofas, pictures in frames, trunks, millions of things sticking out among the bricks. I can't understand how it could have been done ... It's something that's so vicious I can't believe it.7The beautiful baroque city described by Karl Baedeker just two years earlier had completely disappeared.
It is difficult to convey in meaningful terms the scale of the wreckage caused by the Second World War. Warsaw was just one example of a city destroyed - there were dozens more within Poland alone. In Europe as a whole hundreds of cities had been entirely or partially devastated. Photographs taken after the war can give some idea of the scale of the destruction of individual cities, but when one tries to multiply this devastation across the entire continent it necessarily defies comprehension. In some countries - especially Germany, Poland, Yugoslavia and Ukraine - a millennium of culture and architecture had been crushed in the space of just a few short years. The violence that brought about such total devastation has been likened by more than one historian to Armageddon. 8Those people who witnessed the wreckage of Europe's cities struggled to come to terms even with the local devastation they saw, and it is only in their tortured, inadequate descriptions that some of the destruction becomes imaginable. However, before we come to such human reactions to the crushed and shattered scenery, it is necessary to set down some statistics - because statistics matter, regardless of how elusive they can be.As the only nation to have successfully defied Hitler for the entireduration of the war, Britain had suffered badly. The Luftwaffe had dropped almost 50,000 tons of bombs on Britain during the Blitz, destroying 202,000 houses and damaging 4.5 million more.9 The pounding received by Britain's major cities is well known, but it is what happened to some of the smaller towns that shows the true extent of the bombing. The ferocity of the attacks on Coventry gave birth to a new German verb, coventriren -- to 'Coventrate', or destroy utterly. Clydebank is a relatively small industrial town on the outskirts of Glasgow: out of 12,000 homes only 8 escaped damage.10Across the English Channel the damage was not quite so universal, but much more concentrated. Caen, for example, was virtually wiped off the map when the Allies landed in Normandy in 1944: 75 per cent of the city was obliterated by Allied bombs.11 Saint-Lô and Le Havre suffered even worse, with 77 per cent and 82 per cent of the buildings destroyed.12 When the Allies landed in the south of France more than 14,000 buildings in Marseilles were partly or completely destroyed.13 According to government records for compensation claims and loans for war losses, 460,000 buildings in France were destroyed in the war, and a further 1.9 million damaged.14The further east one travelled after the war, the worse the devastation became. In Budapest 84 per cent of the buildings were damaged, and 30 per cent of them so badly that they were entirely uninhabitable.15 About 80 per cent of the city of Minsk in Belarus was destroyed: only 19 of 332 major factories in the city survived, and only then because mines set by the retreating Germans were defused by Red Army sappers just in time.16 Most of the public buildings in Kiev were mined when the Soviets retreated in 1941 -- the rest were destroyed when they returned in 1944. Kharkov in eastern Ukraine was fought over so many times that eventually there was little left to dispute. In Rostov and Voronezh, according to one British journalist, 'the destruction was very nearly 100 per cent'.17 And the list goes on. Approximately 1,700 towns and cities were devastated in the USSR, 714 of them in Ukraine alone.18Those who travelled across this ruined landscape in the aftermath of the war saw city after city after city destroyed. Very few of these people ever attempted to describe the totality of what they had seen - instead they struggled to come to terms with the more localized damage in each single city as they came across it. Stalingrad, for example, was nothing but 'lumps of walls, boxes of half-ruined buildings, piles of rubble, isolatedchimneys'.19 Sebastopol 'was now melancholy beyond words' where 'even in the suburbs ... there was hardly a house standing'.20 In September 1945 the American diplomat George F. Kennan found himself in the formerly Finnish but now Russian city of Vyborg, admiring the way that 'Rays of early morning sunshine ... caught the gutted shells of apartment buildings, and flooded them momentarily with a chill, pale gleam.' Apart from a goat that he startled in one of the ruined doorways, Kennan seemed to be the only living being in the entire city.21At the centre of all this destruction lay Germany, whose cities undoubtedly suffered the most comprehensive damage of the war. Around 3.6 million German apartments were destroyed by the British and American air forces - that is, about a fifth of all living spaces in the country.22 In absolute terms the damage to living spaces in Germany was nearly eighteen times as bad as it was in Britain.23 Individual cities suffered far worse than the average. According to figures from the Reich's Statistical Office, Berlin lost up to 50 per cent of its habitable premises, Hanover 51.6 per cent, Hamburg 53.3 per cent, Duisburg 64 per cent, Dortmund 66 per cent, and Cologne 70 per cent.24When Allied observers came to Germany after the war, most of them expected to find destruction on the same scale as they had witnessed in Britain during the Blitz. Even after British and American newspapers and magazines began to print pictures and descriptions of the devastation it was impossible to prepare for the sight of the real thing. Austin Robinson, for example, was sent to western Germany directly after the war on behalf of the British Ministry of Production. His description of Mainz while he was there displays his sense of shock:That skeleton, with whole blocks level, huge areas with nothing but walls standing, factories almost completely gutted, was a picture that I know will live with me for life. One had known it intellectually without feeling it emotionally or humanly.25British Lieutenant Philip Dark was equally appalled by the apocalyptic vision he saw in Hamburg at the end of the war:[W]e swung in towards the centre and started to enter a city devastated beyond all comprehension. It was more than appalling. As far as the eye could see, square mile after square mile of empty shells of buildings withtwisted girders scarecrowed in the air, radiators of a flat jutting out from a shaft of a still-standing wall, like a crucified pterodactyl skeleton. Horrible, hideous shapes of chimneys sprouting from the frame of a wall. The whole pervaded by an atmosphere of ageless quiet ... Such impressions are incomprehensible unless seen.26There is a sense of utter despair in many of the descriptions of German cities in 1945. Dresden, for example, no longer resembled 'Florence on the Elbe' but was more like 'the face of the moon', and planning directors believed that it would take 'at least seventy years' to rebuild.27 Munich was so badly devastated that 'It truly did almost make one think that a Last Judgement was imminent.'28 Berlin was 'completely shattered - just piles of rubble and skeleton houses'.29 Cologne was a city 'recumbent, without beauty, shapeless in the rubble and loneliness of complete physical defeat'.30Between 18 and 20 million German people were rendered homeless by the destruction of their cities - that is the same as the combined prewar populations of Holland, Belgium and Luxembourg.31 Another 10 million people in Ukraine were also homeless, or more than the total prewar population of Hungary.32 These people lived in cellars, ruins, holes in the ground - anywhere they could find a modicum of shelter. They were entirely deprived of essential services, such as water, gas, electricity - as were millions of others across Europe. Warsaw, for example, had just two working street lights.33 In Odessa water was only available from artesian wells, so that even visiting dignitaries were given just a single bottle per day for washing.34 Without these essential utilities the populations of Europe's cities were reduced to living, as one American columnist described it, 'in medieval fashion surrounded by the broken-down machinery of the twentieth century'.35
While the devastation was at its most dramatic in Europe's cities, rural communities often suffered just as badly. Across the continent farms were plundered, burned, flooded or simply neglected because of the war. The marshes in southern Italy, so assiduously drained by Mussolini, were deliberately flooded again by the retreating Germans, causing a resurgence of malaria.36 More than half a million acres of Holland (219,000 hectares) were ruined when German troops deliberatelyopened the dykes that kept the sea at bay.37 Remoteness from the main theatres of war was no protection from such treatment. More than a third of the dwelling places in Lapland were destroyed by the retreating Germans.38 The idea was to deny the turncoat Finnish forces any shelter during the winter, but it also had the effect of creating over 80,000 refugees. Across northern Norway and Finland roads were mined, telephone lines pulled down and bridges blown up, creating problems that would be felt for years after the war was over.Once again, the further east, the worse the destruction. Greece lost a third of its forests during the German occupation, and over a thousand villages were burned and left uninhabited.39 In Yugoslavia, according to the postwar Reparations Commission, 24 per cent of the orchards were destroyed, as were 38 per cent of the vineyards and about 60 per cent of all livestock. The plundering of millions of tons of grain, milk and wool completed the ruination of the Yugoslav rural economy.40 In the USSR it was even worse: here as many as 70,000 villages were destroyed, along with their communities and the entire rural infrastructure.41 Such damage was not merely the result of fighting and casual plundering - it was caused by the systematic and deliberate destruction of land and property. Farms and villages were burned down for the merest hint of resistance. Vast swathes of forest along the sides of roads were cut down to minimize the risk of ambush.Much has been written about how ruthless Germany and Russia were when they attacked each other, but they were equally ruthless in defence. When the German army streamed into Soviet territory in the summer of 1941, Stalin made a radio broadcast to his people telling them to remove everything they could before fleeing: 'All valuable property, including non-ferrous metals, grain and fuel that cannot be withdrawn must be destroyed without fail. In areas occupied by the enemy, guerrilla units ... must set fire to forests, stores and transports.'42When the tables began to turn, Hitler likewise ordered that nothing should be left behind for the returning Soviets. 'Regardless of its inhabitants, every locality must be burned down and destroyed to deprive the enemy of accommodation facilities,' read one of Hitler's orders to his army commanders in Ukraine in December 1941; 'the localities left intact have to be subsequently ruined by the air force.'43 Later, when things began to get more desperate, Himmler ordered his SS leaders to destroy everything: 'Not one person, no cattle, no quintal of grain, norailway track must remain behind ... The enemy must find a country totally burned and destroyed.'44As a consequence of orders like these, vast areas of agricultural land in Ukraine and Belarus were torched not once, but twice, and with them countless villages and farmhouses that might offer shelter to the enemy. Industry, naturally, was one of the first things to be destroyed. In Hungary, for instance, 500 major factories were dismantled and transported to Germany - over 90 per cent of the rest were deliberately damaged or destroyed - and almost every coal mine was flooded or collapsed.45 In the USSR approximately 32,000 factories were destroyed.46 In Yugoslavia the Reparations Commission estimated that their country had lost more than $9.14 billion worth of industry, or a third of the country's entire industrial wealth.47Perhaps the worst damage was that which befell the continent's transport infrastructure. Holland, for example, lost 60 per cent of its road, rail and canal transport. In Italy up to a third of the country's road network had been made unusable, and 13,000 bridges were damaged or destroyed. Both France and Yugoslavia lost 77 per cent of their rail locomotives and a similar percentage of all rolling stock. Poland lost a fifth of its roads, a third of its rail track (about 10,000 miles in all), 85 per cent of all rolling stock, and 100 per cent of its civil aviation. Norway had lost half of its prewar shipping tonnage, and Greece lost between two-thirds and three-quarters of all shipping. By the end of the war, the only universally reliable method of travel was on foot.48
The physical devastation of Europe was more than merely the loss of its buildings and its infrastructure. It was more, even, than the destruction of centuries of culture and architecture. The truly disturbing thing about the ruins was what they symbolized. The mountains of rubble were, as one British serviceman put it, 'a monument to man's power of self-destruction'. 49 For hundreds of millions of people they were a daily reminder of the viciousness that the continent had witnessed, and which might at any time resurface.Primo Levi, who had survived Auschwitz, claimed that there was something almost supernatural about the way the Germans had destroyed everything in their wake. To him, the broken remains of an army base at Slutsk, near Minsk, demonstrated 'the genius of destruction, of anti-creation, here as at Auschwitz; it was the mystique ofbarrenness, beyond all demands of war or impulse for booty'.50 The destruction wreaked by the Allies was almost as bad: when Levi saw the ruins of Vienna he was overcome by a 'heavy, threatening sensation of an irreparable and definitive evil which was present everywhere, nestling in the guts of Europe and the world, the seed of future harm'.51It is this undercurrent of 'anti-creation' and 'definitive evil' that makes the destruction of Europe's towns and cities so disturbing to contemplate. What is implied in all the descriptions of this time, but never overtly stated, is that behind the physical devastation is something far worse. The 'skeletons' of houses and framed pictures sticking out of the rubble of Warsaw are highly symbolic: hidden beneath the ruins, both literally and metaphorically, there was a separate human and moral disaster.SAVAGE CONTINENT. Copyright © 2012 by Keith Lowe. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. For information, address St. Martin's Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010.
(Continues...)Excerpted from Savage Continent by Lowe Keith, Keith Lowe. Copyright © 2013 by Lowe Keith. Excerpted by permission of Picador.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
Product details
- ASIN : 125003356X
- Publisher : Picador
- Publication date : July 2, 2013
- Edition : Reprint
- Language : English
- Print length : 496 pages
- ISBN-10 : 9781250033567
- ISBN-13 : 978-1250033567
- Item Weight : 15.3 ounces
- Dimensions : 6.2 x 0.85 x 9.15 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #56,123 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #32 in Italian History (Books)
- #79 in German History (Books)
- #267 in World War II History (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Keith Lowe was born in 1970 and studied English Literature at Manchester University. After twelve years as a history publisher, he embarked on a full-time career as a writer and historian, and is now recognized on both sides of the Atlantic as an authority on the Second World War and its aftermath. He is the author of the Inferno: The Devastation of Hamburg 1943, and Savage Continent: Europe in the Aftermath of World War II, which won the 2013 PEN/Hessell-Tiltman Prize for History. In 2017 he published The Fear and the Freedom, to great acclaim. His books have been translated into twenty languages.
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Customers find the book well-researched and thoroughly written, with one review noting its unbiased point of view. Moreover, the visual style receives positive feedback, with one customer describing it as an eye-opening picture of an era. However, the book's pacing receives mixed reactions, with some finding it a perspective of a continent in turmoil while others describe it as depressing. Additionally, the horrors of war are well-explained, though some customers find certain sections dragging.
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Customers find the book enlightening, praising its well-researched account and ability to bring understanding to its subject matter.
"...It is this combination of painstaking accuracy and consummate personalized point of view that makes this book a classic of history and a great read." Read more
"...I think this would be a valuable resource for people who work in government, especially in foreign service. It's an eye-opener, to be sure." Read more
"...Yes, they are also very powerful motivators, and perhaps our politicians will ride those forces to electoral victory, much as Hitler and the Nazis..." Read more
"...The author has gone to great lengths to explore little-known conflicts and sort out conflicting accounts of what happened still disputed today by..." Read more
Customers find the book interesting and amazing, with one noting that each page contains memorable content.
"...Each page contains a memorable and novel insight into the facts and motivations of the many antagonists pursuing grandiose dreams and small -..." Read more
"...The author makes an excellent point that during World War I boundaries were moved to accomodate nationalities, while at the end of World War II,..." Read more
"...I cannot say I enjoyed the book, but I think it deserves a wide reading." Read more
"...The book is worth reading for a sense of what happened - indeed, clearly there could be more movies about this era, as there are literally millions..." Read more
Customers praise the writing style of the book, finding it detailed and comprehensible, with one customer noting its unbiased and well-researched approach.
"...His writing is every bit as good as his thinking...." Read more
"...to cover all the bases, and that it does so in a way that's easy to understand without making me feel like Lowe dumbed things down for the average..." Read more
"...This is nothing less than a great writing by an excellent author. I would highly recommend and look forward to further works of Keith Lowe." Read more
"...important, although often disturbing book, and probably is unsuitable for some readers...." Read more
Customers appreciate the visual style of the book, describing it as enlightening and graphic, with one customer noting how well it matches the content.
"...]This is a truly unique and amazing omnibus ride through the aftermath of WWII in Europe: its..." Read more
"...in a very balanced way that I feel is not only truthful and realistic, but basically fair to all parties involved...." Read more
"...About the audiobook: The narrator’s mid-Atlantic accent matches the content quite well, and quotations are read in accents matching their..." Read more
"...is both a sobering and a harrowing read, but very plainly and deliberately presented...." Read more
Customers find the work excellent, with one mentioning that its structure works well.
"...minor point, but I think it's a fair complaint about an otherwise outstanding work...." Read more
"...He does a great job of getting to the root causes of the modern day genocides and the often hazy alliances formed by disparate peoples with common..." Read more
"Excellent work, with some fascinating stories on top of the monumental historical events...." Read more
"...This book is well written and comprehensible. The structure works well and the topics are clearly differentiated, which is nice." Read more
Customers have mixed reactions to the book's portrayal of horrors, with some appreciating how it explains the atrocities of war, while others find the content extremely troubling.
"...omnibus ride through the aftermath of WWII in Europe: its widespread vengeance, genocide, and ethnic cleansing...." Read more
"What a brutal and grim period this book describes. I am the right audience for this book - I know a lot of the history, but often not the specifics...." Read more
"...This is the first book I've read that discusses the aftermath of war...." Read more
"This book is not for the squeamish. It is graphic in its chronicling of torture, depravity and human debasement in Europe, both before and after VE..." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the pacing of the book, with some appreciating its perspective on the continent's turmoil, while others find it depressing.
"...The story is often horrifying and heart breaking, and I feel about this book, much as I feel about Holocaust memorials...." Read more
"...of WWII in Europe: its widespread vengeance, genocide, and ethnic cleansing...." Read more
"...worst of all, it unleashed a tide of vengeance carrying death, destruction, and political upheaval into the post-war years...." Read more
"...There are excellent chapters about the slave labourers that were freed and the acts of vengeance by so many groups against others...." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the pacing of the book, with some finding it moving while others say it drags in parts.
"...At times the book dragged and could have had more first hand accounts of the tragedies." Read more
"I found this book to be very powerful and moving...." Read more
"...and is written very fluently, although there are one or two sections that drag just a little...." Read more
"...The descriptions of the relocation, dislocation, retribution, and social, economic, and political disarray is compelling, very informative and well..." Read more
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- Reviewed in the United States on July 22, 2012Savage Continent: Europe in the Aftermath of World War IIThis is a truly unique and amazing omnibus ride through the aftermath of WWII in Europe: its widespread vengeance, genocide, and ethnic cleansing. Its unique vision offers the beginning of a new history of the period, one that has been created by an independent voice with as objective a perspective as I have ever encountered among the many angry victims of genocide, injustice, and racism that is the hallmark of this unfortunate era. Each page contains a memorable and novel insight into the facts and motivations of the many antagonists pursuing grandiose dreams and small - minded vengeance. Every assertion and speculation is documented by statistics and detailed references. Of couse, so much of the period is clouded by self serving lies and self protective suppressions, by governments and eye witnesses, that no one will ever traverse these grounds without being forced to make many u-turns. Still, Lowe does an admirable job of mediating between all the conflicting accounts. The only way to protect yourself from being completely subjective is to provide as diverse a perspective on all events as possible; and Lowe carries this out with thorough care for the facts. Jews revenge themselves on German prisoner of war camps with a Nazi - like flair for torture; Poles abuse Jews liberated from death camps by continuing genocide; Communists encourage ethnic cleansing to gain political control of avenging mobs; wherever you look you find the guilty. Everyone is a victim and an accuser. Nevertheless, he gives us his best assessment of a moderate compromise and accurate consensus about what actually happened. His writing is every bit as good as his thinking. Every now and then he cannot resist the attractive overgeneralization, but then he is never far wrong, and the touch of personality does help make it all more interesting. For instance, he calls the orgy of rape on all sides during the war and aftermath, the most ever in Europe. This may understate the 13th century's great orgy of killing and rape dominated by Ghengis Khan or others, but it makes its point vividly. It is this combination of painstaking accuracy and consummate personalized point of view that makes this book a classic of history and a great read.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 5, 2014I'd never given much thought to what happens after a war. The shooting stops, the soldiers go home and everyone resumes their lives. I'm probably not much different from many others in thinking that when the treaties are signed, it's over. Americans especially -- at least those of us who didn't serve overseas -- have no idea of the aftermath. It's not a subject that's covered in general history classes or in books and films. The Third Man touched on it, but that's the only movie I can think of and that only covered one small area.
This is the first book I've read that discusses the aftermath of war. I'm not a student of history so don't have anything to compare Lowe's book to, so all I can really say is that it seems to cover all the bases, and that it does so in a way that's easy to understand without making me feel like Lowe dumbed things down for the average reader, someone who's not a historian.
Having read it, I think I understand a bit more about subsequent conflicts in Europe, especially Russia, Italy, and Ukraine. I think this would be a valuable resource for people who work in government, especially in foreign service. It's an eye-opener, to be sure.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 12, 2012Keith Lowe has written a masterful work on Europe immediately following World War II.
I always had a somewhat simplistic view of the end of the war, which could be summarized by celebrations, bells ringing, and the Marshall Plan which helped feed the hungry and rebuild the devastation. That is the simple hubris we Americans were taught. The truth is found in this book, and it is presented in a very balanced way that I feel is not only truthful and realistic, but basically fair to all parties involved.
The book is presented in four parts which deal with: The Legacy of War, Vengeance, Ethnic Cleansing, and Civil War.
Much of Europe was destroyed from 1939 to 1945. The survivors struggled with no infrastructure in many towns and cities; no water supplies, no transportion, medical centers, housing and the list goes on. Refugees were on the move by the thousands, seeking the basic necessities of life. People starved to death in a landscape of destruction and what little that was left was not readily shared by those who possessed it and people became desperate.
The Allies tried to set up camps to provide for refugees but this was not always successful. Concentration camps were liberated and the world began to understand the horror that killed so many. There are excellent chapters about the slave labourers that were freed and the acts of vengeance by so many groups against others.
There are five very good chapters on ethnic cleansing. After reading these, you have a much better understanding of the tensions in the Balkans and as they are again manifested even in the 1990s with the mass killing of Moslems.
Several points were of great interest. First of all, while the Communists get a bad rap in the West, the author shows that in the countries not taken over by the Soviets, they were not ruthless. The countries in the grip of the Soviet Union had the Red Army and Moscow to back them, and their mission was a Stalinist brand of communism that cared nothing for the nation but was only interested in the collapse of capitalism and the union of all workers. In other nations such as England France and Italy, the advances of the Communinists were not significant.
Also of interest was the information on the Italians. Even before the end of the war, Allies noticed that towns and small areas of Italy that had been liberated declared their independence from their nation. They were fed up with the more than 20 year rule of the Fascists and no longer trusted their national government, no matter what form it took. The Greek civil war was also covered, and a brutal thing it was. It was part of a process where the Allies began to automatically take sides with the right wing factions simply because they opposed the Communists. Such policies have come back to bite us many times in the struggles of the Cold War.
The author makes an excellent point that during World War I boundaries were moved to accomodate nationalities, while at the end of World War II, people were moved by force (and usually brutally) to accomadate boundaries, and in the long run you begin to understand what a great mess Hitler made of Europe. The retributions and killing of Germnas in the Sudetenland is pitiful reading. It is also heartbreaking to read of how the Jews were killed and mistreated after the war, especially by the Poles. The clashes between the Ukranians and Poles is another violent story It is understandable how so many of the Jews longed to get away from Europe and to a new homeland in Palestine, and it is surprising to read that much of this conflict continued for years and years after the end of the war, most notably the Lithuanians and their "Forest Brothers" fighting the organized Soviets in a futile and bitter battle that lasted years after the war.
It was very interesting in that the author documented the shaving of women's heads, those that had slept with the German occupation forces. This was more in evidence in France, Belgium and Holland. In many cases their clothes were torn from their bodies, they were painted with swastiskas and humiliated in general in front of the villagers. Unfortunately for their children sired by German soldiers, they too paid a price as they grew up, but it illustrated that it was (I would say very nearly)a type of helpful revenge for the citizens who had suffered under the German occupation. I recall seeing such an episode in Band of Brothers and the book reflects very much the same thing.
This is nothing less than a great writing by an excellent author. I would highly recommend and look forward to further works of Keith Lowe.
Top reviews from other countries
- R from OzReviewed in Australia on May 31, 2015
5.0 out of 5 stars The untold but important story of mopping up after WWII
Much is known and re-told of the events of the first half of the 1940s. This book recounts information which needs to be far more widely known. How is it that so much turmoil should pass somewhat unknown? This excellent book does as much as a single book can to redress the balance.
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FranciscoReviewed in Spain on March 23, 2013
5.0 out of 5 stars Sorprendente y doloroso.
Había leído comentarios elogiosos sobre este libro y su autor y aprovechando su publicación en España, me atreví a leerlo en su versión original, en inglés. Al acabar el libro, uno sólo puede sobrecogerse por el sufrimiento de tantos millones de europeos una vez terminada la Segunda Guerra Mundial. El final de la contienda supuso el inicio de unos años de horror en el continente en forma de asesinatos, ajustes de cuenta, limpiezas étnicas, guerras civiles más o menos encubiertas, miseria y división en dos bloques antagónicos. Keith Lowe evita juicios de valor y para ello añade información de archivos desclasificados después de 1992 que corroboran la manipulación de datos sobre el número de población implicada en las purgas políticas en Francia e Italia, la Guerra Civil en Grecia, la instauración de regímenes comunistas en el Este de Europe, o el número de alemanes desplazados de Hungría y Polonia. Es el lector quien debe comprender la magnitud de tantas tragedias individuales y colectivas y crear su propia opinión sobre la posguerra. Con todo, Savage Continent ofrece ejemplos de reconciliación entre pueblos y naciones en la esperanza de que situaciones como las descritas no vuelvan a suceder. .
- Viktor H.Reviewed in Germany on April 14, 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars Highly informative book
By reading this book I learned many things of which I had no idea. I was born in 1948 and understand now, for the first time, why some happenings in our family were so unusual and no one wanted to talk about. Now I know why and how for example my uncle died few days after the official end of WW2 in May 1945.
- elisabetta lisa delmastroReviewed in Italy on January 13, 2015
5.0 out of 5 stars let's not forget our past
our past has so much to tell us about our present and future. very strong words and scenes. shocking in some parts but the truth must be told. loved it
- Fred SchoenbergReviewed in Canada on July 11, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Awesome work
Extremely well written, very needed point of view, should be taught as essential historical work