Channel Islands Jersey Guernsey Alderney Sark - Battleground Europe Author:George Forty While the Germans did not succeed in invading Britain during World War II, they occupied a number of islands in the English Channel. The English population continued to lead fairly normal lives, while the German occupiers built some of the most extensive fortifications of the Second World War. As the war progressed, British commandos made occasi... more »onal attacks, resulting in harsher conditions on the islands. The German garrisons were totally isolated by the D-Day landings, but managed to hold on through the following winter to surrender in May 1945. The Channel Islands remain famous for the surviving German fortifications, but new controversies have surfaced in recent years concerning the use of slave labor in construction, reprisals against the local population, and whether attempts by local officials to maintain a normal situation constituted collaboration. The author, a renowned military historian, examines these questions with complete candor, in addition to his study of the famous fortifications. All of the wartime events and the islands and their fortifications as they are today are covered in the popular Battleground Europe style, with illustrations, maps and then-and-now photographs.« less