It is a story of extraordinary scope, and while some aspects of the war are described in greater detail than others, the result is a picture of this immense conflict that feels complete. Through their experiences, Wouk undertakes to tell nothing less than the entire story of World War II – in both Europe and the Pacific – from beginning to end, as well as the Holocaust that laid waste to European Jewry. Throughout this story, Wouk focuses on the Henry family: career naval officer Victor “Pug” Henry, his wife Rhoda, and their three children: sons Warren and Byron – together with Byron’s wife Natalie and her uncle, Aaron Jastrow – and their daughter Madeline. The two books tell one story, published in two volumes for no reason other than its length. You will miss too much of value if you do. Although, as Wouk (pronounced “woke”) writes in his foreword to the second volume, “ War and Remembrance is a story in itself, and can be read without the prologue,” it would be a serious mistake to skip The Winds of War. Together, The Winds of War (1971) and War and Remembrance (1978) make up Herman Wouk’s epic two-volume novel of World War II.
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