Halbe, 1945 Audiobook By Eberhard Baumgart, Roger Moorhouse - introduction, Eva Burke - translator cover art

Halbe, 1945

Eyewitness Accounts from Hell's Cauldron

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Halbe, 1945

By: Eberhard Baumgart, Roger Moorhouse - introduction, Eva Burke - translator
Narrated by: Bruce Mann
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About this listen

In April 1945, German troops withdrawing from the Seelow Heights were encircled by the Soviet Army near the small town of Halbe, south-east of Berlin. Rather than surrender, their orders were to attempt to break out, westward, and join up with the German twelfth Army. A brutal battle ensued, with an estimated 30,000 German and 20,000 Russian soldiers killed, along with thousands of civilians.

This collection of first-hand accounts tells the story of the battle and its aftermath from the German perspective. It is an eclectic mix, containing the recollections of ordinary soldiers, SS-men and men of the Panzer Divisions, as well as civilians caught up in the battle as they attempted to flee ahead of the advancing armies. It brings to life the grim realities of this one-sided engagement, revealing the brutal vengeance of the Soviets and the desperation to escape the slaughter.

Translated into English for the first time, this is an important insight into this devastating and little-known aspect of World War II history.

©2022 Greenhill Books (P)2022 Tantor
Germany Russia World War II Military War
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What listeners say about Halbe, 1945

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    5 out of 5 stars

Another book ruined by awful narration

This book *should* be amazing, but instead we have yet another WWII memoir *ruined* by Bruce Mann and his totally bizarre narration. He continues to put pauses where they make no sense, place emphasis where it makes no sense and, quite simply, completely distract the listener to the detriment of the story. We have obscure pronunciation, such as "de...VICES" and "extra...ordinary". One of the most jarring is how he pronounces the German Tiger tank as "teeger" -- in 20+ years of Audible membership I have never before encountered someone so unaware of their material.

If we can, somehow, put this awful narration aside... the story itself is simply incredible. It tells very personal (and often tragic) stories of how they tried to break out of Halbe and reach the western allies at the River Elbe. You really get a detailed view of the traumatic events they lived through.

Towards the end of the book, you also get some insights from the viewpoint of the civilians and how they were left to pick up the pieces of their homes and lives, which is a point of view that we rarely get to see.

So, excellent story, but all Bruce Mann books should be re-narrated by someone else, to give them justice.
I have recently listened to books narrated by Derek Perkins (x2), Nigel Patterson, Matthew Waterson -- they were all excellent and could easily rescue these spoiled and irreplaceable memoirs.

As Steve M says in his review, Bruce Mann should not be allowed to narrate more books (certainly not military histories).

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I keep listening over and over... and over

Excellent Narration

calling it "intense" doesnt even do it justice.

excellent book on a seriously underrated event

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Amazing stories BUT…….

This narrator is so,so bad. So hard to pay attention with this guy’s weird, weird dramatics and tempo.

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Good listening

Good listing , detailed information about the world war 2 sufferings by innocents by atrocious nazis

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Glimpse into true misery

This has to be on the list of places you’d least like to be in history. Great book! I hesitate sometimes on the short ones but this one packs a punch.

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    3 out of 5 stars

Awful Narration. Story Repetitive, info suspect

The narration in this book is Awful.. The narration, however, is simply atrocious and Bruce Mann should not be allowed to narrate anything. With the number of talented voice actors, I can't believe that anyone went "Sure, this guy conveys interest and passion about the topic". I mean, he is just *awful*. He is completely monotone and shows no appreciation that he has the slightest empathy for what he is reading.

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1 person found this helpful