
Finland's War of Choice
The Troubled German-Finnish Coalition in World War II
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Narrated by:
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Tom Parks
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By:
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Henrik Lunde
About this listen
This book describes the odd coalition between Germany and Finland in World War II, and their joint military operations from 1941 to 1945. This is a topic often missing in English, though in stark contrast to the numerous books on the shorter and less bloody Winter War. That conflict represented a gallant fight of a democratic “David” against a totalitarian “Goliath” that caught the imagination of the world. The story of Finland fighting alongside a “Goliath” of its own has not brought pride to that nation and was a period many Finns would rather forget.
The prologue of this book brings the listener up to speed by briefly examining the difficult history of Finland, from its separation from the Soviet Union in 1917 to its isolation after being bludgeoned in 1939-40. It then examines both Finnish and German motives for forming a coalition against the USSR, and how - as logical as a common enemy would seem - the lack of true planning and preparation would doom the alliance. This book posits that it was mind-boggling how the highly professional German General Staff allowed itself to accept the militarily unsound and shaky coalition that resulted. The war aims were not discussed or harmonized, there were no campaign plans with tasks and missions spelled out past the initial assault, no effective main effort established, inadequate force levels, and an unsound command structure with various headquarters. Practically every rule in the book was broken. The objective of linking up with the Finns in the Leningrad area was an important factor in Hitler opting for three main drives into the Soviet Union rather than an earlier OKH plan that called for only two.
After describing the operations during and after Barbarossa, this book describes how the Finnish theater became a blind ally for the Germans. Their strongest and best army was trapped both operationally and geographically in central and northern Finland, making virtually no contribution to the war effort. The Germans could not bring to bear enough forces to accomplish their objectives without substantial Finnish assistance, and that was not forthcoming.
The final chapters deal with the Soviet counteroffensive against the Finns in 1944. The Finns lost all their gains and quickly concluded a separate armistice. This left the German forces in Finland to simply vacate the territory, fighting between the Finns and Soviets alike as they tried to return to the main war. Jointly suffering 291,000 casualties, the only consolation was that the coalition had inflicted some 830,000 on the Soviets.
In this book, Henrik Lunde, a former US Special Operations colonel, and the renowned author of Hitler’s Pre-emptive War: The Battle for Norway, 1940, once again fills a profound gap in our understanding of World War II.
©2011 Henrik O. Lunde (P)2013 Audible, Inc.Listeners also enjoyed...
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What listeners say about Finland's War of Choice
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- E S
- 03-17-21
Great Book
Best recap of the action in the Nordics during WWII that I've seen. Author does a great job linking the tactical actions to the operational, strategic and political levels.
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- Christopher Daniels
- 06-14-19
learn about a hidden part of WW 2 history
an interesting look into a hidden part of world war 2 history.
the only thing I can say against it is the reader really doesn't know how to pronounce a lot of Finnish names and Cities. other then that it is a good book.
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- michael olinger
- 08-01-18
The Swedish Chef lives!
Good book , but the narration lets it down because of the unfortunate "Swedish Chef" pronunciations of Finnish personal and place names. Swedish and Finnish are NOT related or within the same language group. Wikipedia could have provided proper pronunciations.
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- Mr. A. Fenn
- 03-19-17
I gave up
I gave up, I wish the narrator had too. So badly read, terrible pronunciation, he must have said "Murmanks" about 300 times, it is Murmansk. Likewise there is apparently a town in Sweden called "Torino", when this should be Tornio. The delivery was so poor and emotionless the book which is of great interest to me becomes nothing more than a catalogue of military movements in places which make no sense due to poor pronunciation.
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6 people found this helpful
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- Daniel D.
- 06-20-19
informative, detailed.
Movements of units on battlefield are very hard to follow in an audiobook.
otherwise veri indormative, easy to follow the story. valid analysis points.
For a short version just listen last chapter 15mins.
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- J. Walker
- 01-01-18
Boring
What did you like best about Finland's War of Choice? What did you like least?
This is simply a boring book.
Would you be willing to try another one of Tom Parks’s performances?
No
Was Finland's War of Choice worth the listening time?
No
Any additional comments?
Fighting this "continuation war" was horrific with the cold and horrible weather. The author simply writes that regiments were reduced to battalion strength. Not very gritty. No understanding of what the combatants Russian, German and Finns had to struggle through.
The book had no energy. A wasted purchase.
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1 person found this helpful
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- Juergen Reimers
- 08-11-15
Missing Maps
Would you try another book from Henrik Lunde and/or Tom Parks?
Yes
Any additional comments?
With all the unknown localities and no maps it is sometimes difficult to follow/understand the story.
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- Rick
- 10-21-22
This book highlights a troubled history of Finland
A well researched history of the WW2 period that involved Finland. The audible version of this book is probably easier to digest if the listener has a detailed knowledge of the areas described or accompanied the audio with maps as visuals. The story is relevant today given Russias ambitions to understand the importance strong defense in the region.
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- Keith
- 10-17-19
Awful presentation, incomplete analysis
Having spent a couple of years in Finland I found the mispronunciation of city, area, and peoples names so annoying that I found it nearly impossible to follow the dialogue. The narrator could have spent 15 or 20 minutes preparing for the narration and avoided all pronunciation problems as the Finnish language uses Latin pronunciations for every letter, no silent letters, and the emphasis is always on the first syllable. By the time I figured out who he was talking about, or which city or area he was talking about he was off onto something else.
Having only listened to 1/4 of the book, I am shocked that the presentation talks in depth about Finnish and German troop deployment and what "may" have been the German and Finnish negotiators intents and glosses over the previous Russian/Finnish wars, Winter War and it's after-war, the failure of the west to provide aid as promised during the Winter War, as if Finnish/Russian history, the failure of the west, and the current Russian troop movements were virtually irrelevant to the Fin's political positioning in the early years of WWII.
Having many Finnish friends I was hoping to find an unbiased book about the Finnish role in WWII. After listening to 1/4 of the book, this wasn't it. What I found was a sanitized Russian history and continual speculation about Finnish and German intent, after-all, we all know that all diplomacy was handled out in the open by every other country involved.
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1 person found this helpful
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- Hector X. G.
- 05-31-20
Could not finish
I am in World War II history buff, I’ve read everything on the subject and I teach history at a community college level. This is the first World War II book I could not finish. The content was just too dry and the narrator was equally dry
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1 person found this helpful