Customer Rating: 



Review Summary: A Critical Reference for WW2 Junkies, Writers & Historians
Review: This book is an essential reference on your shelf about the Waffen-SS organization. The book covers a vast spectrum of information about the SS.
1. Background
2. Division Operations, including great diagrams about motorized infantry, panzer units, mountain troops, etc.,
3. German Units vs. Non-German Units. Believe it or not, there were non-German SS units formed from volunteers gathered from a number of non-Aryan countries. Ultimately, Himmler knew that he needed bodies to fill his boots. These volunteers were from Albania, Bosnia, Estonia, France, Georgia, Netherlands, Scandinavia and more. One was a Muslim SS Division.
4. Famous SS Soldiers - this section gives details on their lives, service and final disposition.
5. SS Weapons used throughout the war.
Overall, a great reference on the subject.
Customer Rating: 



Review Summary: A Critical Reference for WW2 Junkies, Writers & Historians
Review: This book is an essential reference on your shelf about the Waffen-SS organization. The book covers a vast spectrum of information about the SS.
1. Background
2. Division Operations, including great diagrams about motorized infantry, panzer units, mountain troops, etc.,
3. German Units vs. Non-German Units. Believe it or not, there were non-German SS units formed from volunteers gathered from a number of non-Aryan countries. Ultimately, Himmler knew that he needed bodies to fill his boots. These volunteers were from Albania, Bosnia, Estonia, France, Georgia, Netherlands, Scandinavia and more. One was a Muslim SS Division.
4. Famous SS Soldiers - this section gives details on their lives, service and final disposition.
5. SS Weapons used throughout the war.
Overall, a great reference on the subject.
Customer Rating: 



Review Summary: Excellent un-biased source of Waffen-SS Information
Review: This book is a great overview of the divisions and commanders within those divisions, along with information of what exactly they did. My favorite part of this book is the misconception and myth section, because it sets the record straight in my opinion. Alot of the myths are what the majority of the public believe, I have even tried to explain these things to people, but they just dont get it. Even specials on the history channel seem biased,condemning and making deragatory remarks about certain people or events related to the Waffen-SS. But this book points out key facts, and why how the vast majority of people view the Waffen-SS, is wrong. But as they say, the winners of the war write the history books.
I recommend this book to anyone who is open minded and willing to look at the Waffen-SS in a different light, contrary to the popular and misinformed beliefs of today.
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Review Summary: Too much info in too little of a space
Review: Author tries to cover ALL the SS formations in this work. This sacrifices detail to fit them all in, but does seem to hit all the formations. There's general information on the SS as a whole. I particularly like the section on common myths of the SS.
Customer Rating: 



Review Summary: Mostly Excellent but more of a Handbook than an Encyclopedia
Review: This is a finely done work on certain matters involving the Waffen-SS. On those matters the book can be considered inclusive of its subject matter and thus an encyclopedia of sorts. On several other matters, however, the consideration of the subject matter is cursory at best and can in no sense be considered encyclopedic. On still other subject matters involving the Waffen-SS there is no significant discussion at all.
The author starts out with a very well done chapter on the Order of Battle for each Waffen-SS unit from the two Waffen-SS Armies (the 6th Panzer and short-lived 11th Panzer) to the 18 Waffen-SS Corps down to the almost 40 operational Waffen-SS Divisions. This chapter includes a brief history of each such Waffen-SS unit. It is very well done and takes up the first 58 pages (i.e., about a fifth of the book).
(Unfortunately, this chapter, which begins the book, has two minor errors on the first 3 pages: First, the English "1st" is stated as being the equivalent of the German "1;" but in fact the German "1." is the equivalent of "1st" in English. Second, it is my recollection that the naming of the 32nd Division as "30. Januar" (i.e., in English, "30th of January") was not in tribute to the Nazis taking power on Jan. 30, 1933 but was named in reference to Hitler's being named Chancellor on that date (i.e., the Division was named in honor of Hitler not the Nazi party).)
Next there is a brief, but excellent, discussion on the general structure of the various types of Waffen-SS Divisions (e.g., panzer, panzer-grenadier, mountain, cavalry). (This takes up 10 pages.)
This is followed by a well-written review of the origins of the Waffen-SS (titled, "Germans in the Waffen-SS"). (This takes up almost 15 pages.)
The next chapter, "Germanics in the Waffen-SS," is the heart of the book, taking up about 100 pages (or over a third of the book). It examines the broad base upon which a great number of members of the Waffen-SS were drawn, e.g., Denmark, Norway, Finland, and Sweden, and reviews the number of members from each nation or region (11 altogether), who led them, and where and when they fought and the multi-national Waffen-SS Divisions to which they were assigned.
Also included is a short chapter (about 15 pages) on the "Non-German and Non-Germanic" nations that contributed soldiers to the Waffen-SS, including their number and general history. (The largest such contingents were Bosnian (up to 15,000 Muslims and 4,500 Catholics (Croatians)), Estonians (over 25,000), Hungarians (over 50,000 ethnic Magyars), Latvians (over 60,000), and Russians (about 20,000, not including 15,000 Cossacks), and Ukrainians (over 20,000).) This chapter is also well done.
The next chapter is on "Leading Personalities" of the Waffen-SS. Unfortunately, of the approximately 1,000,000 men who served in the ranks of the Waffen-SS, a mere 13 are included, making this chapter woefully inadequate. Many famous Waffen-SS figures are missing, which hardly makes the book encyclopedic. There are thus no entries, for example, of the following well-known (and even infamous) Waffen-SS members:
1.) Leon Degrelle
2.) Hermann Fegelein
3.) Bronislav Kaminski
4.) Fritz Klingenberg
5.) Kurt Meyer
6.) Wilhelm Mohnke
7.) Johannes Muehlenkamp
8.) Jochen Peiper
9.) Artur Phleps
10.) Fritz Witt
11.) Michael Wittmann
(Although these Waffen-SS members may be discussed or mentioned in other parts of the book, that is of little use to the reader looking for information on them since the book lacks an index.)
The following chapter, on "Weapons of the Waffen-SS," also seems to be an afterthought, taking up a bare 15 pages.
The final chapter, on "Misconceptions and Controversies of the Waffen-SS," does make its points clearly and cogently, despite its brevity (another dozen or so pages). It is by no means an apology for the Waffen-SS. It is instead a lucid explanation of many issues surrounding the Waffen-SS. Many of these issues are purposely misconstrued or ignored by many writers pretending to be historians. These imposters fail each of the three litmus tests set down by Cicero two millenia ago to separate the true historian from the mere propagandist. These are: (1) to never tell an untruth; (2) to never suppress the truth; and (3) to always be free of malice (i.e., be impartial).
In sum, this is a very well-written and researched basic work on the Waffen-SS but it is more of an handbook than an encyclopedia.