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    The War Between the Generals

    Posted By: robin-bobin
    The War Between the Generals

    The War Between the Generals by David Irving
    Publisher: Focal Point Publications; New Ed edition (29 April 1982) | 464 Pages | ISBN: 0140055347 | English | PDF | 3.6 MB




    David Irving recalls something of the history of this book:

    The War Between the Generals


    IT IS over twenty years since I wrote The War Between the Generals. I wrote it for Tom Congdon's new publishing house Congdon & Lattes. He had offices near the top of the Empire State building.

    Congdon had previously edited the book "Jaws" for a writer called Peter Benchley who had never written a book in his life; immediately after that he had edited my Rommel biography and then Göring after that. He became a good friend – his wife Connie was MUCH more difficult, a real southern belle, and very full of her ancestry – but he has now long retired to Nantucket and I lost sight of him.

    I wrote The War Between the Generals in the middle of a divorce battle, 1979/80. It became very ugly, between the two sides' lawyers, though not between us; and Tom found himself in the thick of it when he came to stay with us in London. One day a High Court judge ordered him – my editor! – out of my home! He was baffled, and so was I. I transferred at once with him to New York City for two months to finish the book to deadline.

    I had been retyping the manuscript in London on a Xerox 850 word processor, a real cutting-edge machine that cost £15,000 cash up front in 1980 ("buy now, because in December the price is changing": it did, it came down five thousand). Tom found an identical machine in Wall Street for me to work on, but it was available only at nights. I took the subway or cab back to his apartment at 5 or 6 each morning.

    I remember driving past the Dakota Building on Central Park one morning and seeing cameras, television lights, and reporters clustered around the entrance: John Lennon had just been shot.

    I had brought over the Xerox discs to New York and reworked them night after night. We trimmed them down for print, and when the job was finished I returned to the U.K. Tom worked on thereafter from the paper print-out, while I retained the Xerox floppy discs.

    My book was one of their first, and was make or break for them – and it broke them: The New York Times's Hungarian-born reviewer John Lukacs stabbed the book in the back in the March 8, 1981 Book Review, a few days before publication date. (Years later I discovered that Lukacs had a bone to pick with me over his own earlier failed attempts to find a publisher for his planned Hitler biography).

    The same morning that the NYT featured his scathing review, the nationwide NBC TV programme "Today" pulled the interview which they had pre-recorded between Ted Koppel and myself about the book – took it off their broadcast schedule. It took six months for the newspaper to print a response from me in which I shot down all the lies that Lukacs had written.

    The book was published in Britain (Allen Lane/The Penguin Press), Germany (Albrecht Knaus/Bertelsmann), Italy (Arnoldo Mondadori Editore), Japan (Hayakawa) and many other countries.

    Three years ago, searching for some of the Göring files that I needed for the High Court Lipstadt Trial hearing, I send the ancient, dust-covered discs (8-inch monsters, holding 150 pages each) to a specialist London firm, to convert them to modern floppies. It took the firm three years, until April 2000, and cost me a thousand pounds.

    The files proved me right in most of the allegations made by Prof. Richard Evans ("The Skunk") in the Lipstadt case, but that is another story (we were not allowed to introduce this new evidence in the appeal). Among the wreckage that the firm retrieved from the Xerox discs were the old 1980 files of The War Between the Generals – what might be called the original "author's cut".

    Thanks to the efforts of Linda Nelson in Chicago, this Internet version has been revised back to approximate the text as published by Tom Congdon. His editing was always superb.

    Wednesday, December 26, 2001



    The War Between the Generals


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