Niall Barr
Titles: Pendulum of War
Category: Non-Fiction
Agent:Veronique Baxter
Dr Niall Barr is a Senior Lecturer in Defence Studies at the Defence Studies Department, King's College, London, based at the Joint Services Command and Staff College, Shrivenham. Educated at the University of St Andrews, he has previously taught at St Andrews and the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst. His main research focus concerns twentieth century military history but he also has an enduring interest in the Scottish military tradition.
He has published widely on British military history including (J.P. Harris with Niall Barr), Amiens to the Armistice, (Brasseys, 1998) and Flodden 1513 (Tempus, 2001). His most recent work was a major study of the Alamein campaign, Pendulum of War: The Three Battles of El Alamein which was published by Jonathan Cape Ltd in June 2004 and his study of the British ex-service movement, The Lion and the Poppy: British Veterans, Politics and Society 1921-1939, was published by Praeger Publishers in 2005.
He is married, has two young children, and lives in Oxfordshire.
Pendulum of War
Three Battles at El Alamein
Category: Non-Fiction
UK Publisher: Jonathan Cape
UK Publication Date: 04/08/05
A compelling new history of a crucial turning point in the Second World War which also provides a detailed picture of the British Army at a critical stage in its fight against Hitler's Germany. In late June 1942, the dispirited and defeated British Eighth Army was pouring back towards the tiny railway halt of El Alamein in the western desert of Egypt. Tobruk had fallen and Eighth Army had suffered a humiliating defeat at the hands of Rommel's Panzerarmee Afrika. Yet just five months later, the famous bombardment opened the Eighth Army's own offensive which destroyed the Axis threat to Egypt. Explanations for the remarkable change of fortune have generally been sought in the abrasive personality of the new army commander Lieutenant-General Bernard Law Montgomery. But as Niall Barr shows in this new interpretation, based on extensive original research, the long running controversies surrounding the commanders of Eighth Army - Generals Auchinleck and Montgomery - and that of their legendary opponent, Field Marshal Erwin Rommel, have often been allowed to obscure the true nature of the Alamein campaign.
This book is the story of how an army learnt from its mistakes. The focus on personality has blurred the continuity of experience that saw the Eighth Army transform itself from a tactically inept collection of units into a battle-winning force. Pendulum of War explores how the Eighth Army learnt from bitter experience to develop tactical and operational methods that eventually mastered the veterans of Rommel's Afrika Korps and provides a vivid and fresh perspective on the fighting at El Alamein from the early desperate days of July to the final costly victory in November.
Professor Richard Holmes, RUSI Journal, February 2005
'Niall Barr has produced what deserves to become the standard work on the desert war in 1942.'
General Wesley Clark, Washington Post
'A wonderful recounting of the British campaign in North Africa. … Barr captures the struggle of the soldiers and resolve of the leaders, and the learning process of war. Even more, he portrays the internal politics of the British high command and the relationship between generals and politicians with subtlety and insight that few writers of military history have matched. … This is not only an exceptionally clear and detailed look at the battles in the western desert, but also a superb study of organizational leadership in crisis.'
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