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The Korean War
- Narrated by: Cameron Stewart
- Length: 19 hrs and 50 mins
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Publisher's Summary
On 25 June, 1950, the invasion of South Korea by the Communist North launched one of the bloodiest conflicts of the last century. The seemingly limitless power of the Chinese-backed North was thrown against the ferocious firepower of the UN-backed South in a war that can be seen today as the stark prelude to Vietnam.
Max Hastings drew on first-hand accounts of those who fought on both sides to produce this vivid and incisive reassessment of the Korean War, bringing the military and human dimensions into sharp focus. Critically acclaimed on publication, The Korean War remains the best narrative history of this conflict.
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What listeners say about The Korean War
Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- rstone23
- 03-30-16
Brings a true history to a war that is often over looked
Brings a true history to an otherwise forgotten war. The story keeps you engaged as it brings you through the years and battles that politics dictated instead of a goal to win the war.
8 people found this helpful
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- Stephen
- 03-21-16
The Korean War - Hasting's Take
Story: Overall, the book is very good and covers elements not covered in most books on Korea such as the UK contributions to the UNC. I recommend this book.
Narrator: it is always a pleasure to listen to Cameron Stewart. There is usual bias of an American listening to a British voice.
Production: Excellent.
4 people found this helpful
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- John
- 05-04-17
simply the best chronology and
simply the best chronology and analysis o the Korean War ...heavy on facts and reflection
2 people found this helpful
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- Michael S. Owens
- 04-28-17
An excellent historical work - but....
This is an excellent historical work focused on little known aspects of the Korean War.
unfortunately the reader's terrible attempts to affect an American accent while reading quotations, amusing at first, become extremely annoying by the end. I would much rather he read solely in his native British accent, preferring to imagine that I was being told the story by the author, himself from the UK.
4 people found this helpful
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- Mikkel
- 11-11-15
Mostly a high level view
I had hoped, that the book would be more like Stephen Ambrose's books from World War 2. That is not the case. It's taking a higher level approach, with less focus on the combat and experience of the men.
4 people found this helpful
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- Jordan Schneider
- 03-28-15
Strong mil-focused history of Korean War
Deft handling of military and political aspects, but a little weak on politics and lacks post-ussr fall docs. Aside from that doesn't feel all that dated and he takes advantage of when he wrote it to conduct interviews with lots of different voices. could have gone a bit deeper militarily. Pow chapter of Koreans held in the aouth fascinating. Good job weaving in different non-elite voices and from multiple sides. Would've loved to learn more about Turkish fighters. Worthy war in the end, particularly given how ROK has been able to thrive, important to see relative morality when defending flawed regime that's better than alternative. But enough with the Uk analysis can do no wrong.
Not a brilliant work, but good research and interviews went into it. Mac portrait good and concise, not much on us high politics. Good on characterizing how societies were responding to the war, perspective from everyday Americans and uk. Odd to think that uk in 1950 saw itself a first rate power, empire would last for awhile was operating assumption. Have to always be contextualizj get, imagining what is the recent history of the subjects, get a sense of their historical and political frame of references.
3 people found this helpful
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- JxL
- 02-26-15
well-rounded & thoughtful
this is a well-rounded and thoughtful survey of the American and English experience in the Korean War. the narrator sought to enliven quotations with his imitations of the various accents of the speakers, which I could have lived without; but I can't suggest a better way to signal the beginnings and endings of quoted material, so even that I got used to. Hastings I have grown accustomed to enjoying and respecting.
1 person found this helpful
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- James Fowler
- 11-15-18
Interesting History
An interesting interpretation and story. But the author's dislike for America was obvious and reinforced by his biased examples and interviews with non-Americans.
2 people found this helpful
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- James Walker
- 03-23-21
Like his book on vietnam, a truly gratifying, educational, introspective, and all encompassing experience
While the book is a bit dated at this point, it provides the most essential account of the Korean War. It bears some resemblances in narrative structure to Tradegy, such as focusing on the experiences of pows and the airmen by about the 2/3 or 3/4 point, which isn’t bad just something I noticed. Also like Tragedy, the last chapter is an almost awe-inspiring exercise in reflection, summary, introspection and making you feel like you understand the conflict as well as most historians. Has made me think twice about my views on Communism, and the best use of limited warfare.
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- Ozyman Jones
- 06-28-20
Good coverage of an almost forgotten war.
Always entertaining and informative, stacked with interesting facts. There are a great many stories and asides that fill in the human side of the conflict. Well read and never boring, for this listener.
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- Mark P
- 12-14-14
A missing piece of history
Would you consider the audio edition of The Korean War to be better than the print version?
Print would have provided a reference book that I could see maps
What was the most interesting aspect of this story? The least interesting?
The political tensions between the various countries and the potential use of nuclear weapons
Have you listened to any of Cameron Stewart’s other performances? How does this one compare?
not listened to any
Did you have an emotional reaction to this book? Did it make you laugh or cry?
no emotional reaction other than wishing the veterans should gain far more recognition for their action in this forgotten and neglected conflict
Any additional comments?
A really worthy book to gain an insight into a war that has been ignored and forgotten.
14 people found this helpful
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- S. Morris
- 03-07-18
MASH It Isn't
Max Hastings is one of those extremely thorough writers that provides a comprehensive picture of the events in his books. I found the detail in his treatment of the war against Japan during World War 2 amazing. However, I was less enamoured with his work on the Falklands conflict as it read more akin to a government report and lacked more of the personal accounts that enrich the telling of such events. Still, Hastings is accomplished and so I felt his book on the Korean war would be a good start to gain an insight into that theoretically ongoing conflict.
This book didn't suffer nearly so much as his Falklands work did and so was a more interesting read. I care less for the politics behind the conflicts and more on the men that fought it but I do understand that one needs an overall frame of reference and thus a need to fully detail the politics behind the scenes.
It amused me to find out that in one meeting between the North Korean representatives and the American and South Koreans that both parties sat in silence across a table from one another for over 2 hours at a point in the conflict when tensions were running high. It's always amazing to see how egos play a part at the highest level seeing the American delegation having a separate entrance built to the negotiation hut in order not to use the same one as the North Koreans.
The book ably depicts just how brutal the climate was as well as the opposition and the harsh winters were killers to both sides. Having known very little about the conflict, I was shocked at the evident ineptness early on by the Americans and it shows how just a few years after World War II how the quality and readiness of the U.S army had sharply declined in that time. Also, the poor quality of the South Korean troops only added to this inadequate response to the North Korean incursion. The levels of cruelty by South Korean soldiers on their own troops and civilians was also an eye opener.
We also see the rise of the Kim family that went on to dominate North Korea to this day so yet another education in this war. Hastings is very diligent but I did note he omitted a small but relevant incident where a North Korean pilot defected with his MIG fighter after a leaflet drop by the U.S offering $100,000 to the pilot that did so. This intelligence coup would have shaped the response to these MIG fighters by the U.S pilots and so I was surprised Hastings missed this.
Dry politics aside, this book is an in depth treatment of the brutal conflict and well worth a read if you want to learn more about this event in world history.
25 people found this helpful
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- David K.
- 05-15-18
Comprehensive, informative & genuinely interesting
Knowing only the broadest outlines of the Korean War, this title kept me company for a week out walking the dogs and more than once I found myself finding a bench or a gate to sit on a while and listen closely. I was expecting this to be a bit of a dutiful job, filling in a big gap in my personal knowledge but it turned out to be an extremely well-written, well-read piece of work which was from time to time as gripping as a novel for anyone not knowing what happened next. Not bad for a depiction of a war which was, I now understand, frequently a wretched, freezing stand-off.
Further reading reassures me that Hastings has not missed out anything worth fretting about so my admittedly inexpert opinion would be that I would heartily recommend this to anyone wanting to understand a major piece of recent history in one excellent volume.
8 people found this helpful
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- David
- 05-24-18
Long but very easy to get through. Recommend.
The narrator was great and the content is good in that it breaks it up and looks at the conflict from multiple angles. Would have liked more north korean perspective even if caveats applied.
4 people found this helpful
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- Jim
- 05-29-15
Consistently Gripping
A wholly gripping account of a war which Hastings argues had to be fought because of what was at the time a real threat from communist totalitarian states. As with his other books he offers eye witness accounts of combatants which keeps the action urgent and exciting while detailing the strategic and political efforts of generals, presidents and foreign policy wonks. It's a very satisfying combination and in this particular book it's applied to the story of a country split between murderous communists and despotic nationalists, each backed by a superpower. The allies had good equipment but a shortage of battle hardened troops, the communists had relatively poor kit but were willing to win victory by sacrificing massive numbers of poorly trained infantry. Hastings argues that the terrain and the border with China meant that the war was always, in effect, unwinnable but the story plays out as a riveting dog-fight between two enormous armies lead by gifted but deranged generals across an extraordinarily difficult landscape. Hastings' reflections on what happens when the electorates of democratic nations become bored of intractable conflict and repelled by the foreign regimes that their governments have backed also has strong resonances with what's currently happening in the middle east.
4 people found this helpful
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- Joe Scanlon
- 05-26-18
Korean Conflict
Having had an uncle in the Gloucester’s who was involved in the war I was interested to gain a better understanding of the conflict.
The in depth research and personal accounts make this book a must all historians.
3 people found this helpful
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- John H. Bethea
- 04-17-20
Insulting American accent
This book would be okay if the reader didn’t adopt the worst, insulting accent that I’ve ever heard.
1 person found this helpful
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- M.E.
- 06-24-22
Masterly account of the 'Forgotten War'
Clear, dispassionate but never cold, always balanced. Highly recommended.
Max Hastings shows why this forgotten conflict needs to be remembered
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- J. Wexler
- 05-21-22
Top notch history.
captivating, great flow, clear and well organized. This history was also very evenhanded in its presentation. Thorough enough to be heally helpful, but not detailed to-death. Sometimes...the accents are a bit off.
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- MarkM-D
- 01-21-22
Enlightening and riveting read.
Even though this book was written some time ago, it’s point has not really changed. Learning our history is important, Korea is one that we tend to forget. But it was more than just that, this book explains why we know so little about the war.
Worth every moment of your time.
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- John Travers
- 08-05-16
Impressive detail and sensitivity
Hastings is a great wartime storyteller. He shows admirable balance and qualifies his opinions with cautions, and as far as I can tell, full disclosure of his preconceptions and assumptions.
The narrator is very good, with the sad exception of his Australians who all sound like intoxicated cockneys - including the diplomats.
4 people found this helpful
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- Amazon Customer
- 07-19-21
Korea
A military historian at the top of his game supplimented by the right narrator for the task .Bravo
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- Ben Sewell
- 02-18-21
The pinnacle of Korean war storytelling
Max finds a way of making a historical tragedy, just the most interesting thing you can imagine. The definitive retelling of the korean war, would recomment to anyone who's searching for more on this part of the cold war.
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- Anonymous User
- 09-23-20
A nationalist fight viewed as a ideological war
Great expose of a not well remembered conflict of the twentieth century. Max Hastings has captured the fox hole to the presidency and back again aspects of the combat and challenges of the Korean War. His discussion on MacArthurs brilliance and foibles is one of the more interesting components of the book, especially in light of Samuel Huntington’s view on the role of the soldier in politics written around the time of the war.
However the most poignant theme throughout the book is the view that Korea was a war against communism rather a war for national unity between two authoritarian states. One strong with reluctant backers the other extremely weak with the full backing of the world’s capitalist power, America. This thread throughout the book speaks to the most telling narrative of the war from the fox hole to the White House unmistakable tone of good versus subtle political evil is ever present.
It is through this thematic lens that readers/listeners should consider the war’s enduring lessons as the twenty first century shapes up for a similar ideological show down. A showdown that may mask the underlying reasons for tension and possibly conflict.
1 person found this helpful
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- Ken C
- 03-16-19
Tells a Story Largely Ignored
Although this book is not new, itstill tells a very relevant story about world politics and the situation the United States found itself in during the vacuum that followed WW2. It explains a complicated and uncertain terms without indictement or bias. I found it excellent.
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- Fuznut
- 04-01-22
History at it's best.
Excellent performance and excellently written history of the Korean War. Thank god MacArthur was given the boot!
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- Bondi Amazon Customer
- 01-21-22
Stewart takes this to the next level
Cameron Stewart’s narration adds needed interest to this story, which like the war itself had stale periods. Hastings’ usual detailed research shows through with his usual blow by blow description of the action. Whilst you might not always agree with Sir Max’s geo political contextualisation, it’s thoughtful and carefully considered.
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- Anonymous User
- 11-30-21
Should be subtitled the Definitive History of...
This was my first foray into Max Hastings books. Have been listening to this over the past 2 weeks and enjoyed it immensely. I studied history at school and did a module on the Korean War. This book seems to do everything we were taught to do. write both sides of the story, acknowledge sources and note their veracity. If you want a fair well balanced overview of the Korean Conflict, I would reccomend this 100%.
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- Nunbro
- 01-01-21
Great narrative history. Shame about the accents.
Hastings ability to pull together the complex threads of world history is first class. This is very good introduction to a formative event of the Cold War and essential for an understanding of what was to happen in Vietnam. My only complaint is the narrator’s use of accents. The Chinese and Korean are comical and close to racism. The Australian soldiers sound like cockneys. The Australian conservative foreign minister would have talked like an upperclass Englishman.
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- Anonymous User
- 10-27-19
Brought to life General McArthur and the involvement of China.
Korea was the scene of the first USA war where the enemy was The Yellow Peril. I didn’t have much knowledge of this war other than it was really ugly. Possibly both sides were ugly. Even though it was written in the mid 1980s I think, South Korea have continued to thrive since and North Korea have continued to be a basket case. Certainly worth listening too.