Saturday, August 6, 2011

Who Paid for WWII?

After completing William Manchester's masterly 2 volume treatment of Winston Churchill from 1874-1940, I wanted to read something on Churchill's war years. Accordingly I'm currently working through Sir Max Hastings' recent book Winston's War.

One point Hastings make is the vast difference between the experience of the Soviet Union and the United States and Great Britain through the war.

World War II is generally considered to have begun on 1 Sept 1939 when Nazi Germany invaded Poland. After initially combining with Germany as an ally, the Soviet Union was thrust out of the Axis powers when Hitler turned on Soviet Union on 22 June 1941. Hitler here sowed the seed of his own destruction by guaranteeing a tw- front war. Though the United States has been supplying Great Britain since the Lend-Lease Act was signed on 11 March 1941, she entered the war in earnest after the Japenese attacked Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941. Hastings points out that while millions of Russians and Germans were dying on the eastern front, Churchill and Roosevelt and the Allied Powers could cherry pick low-hanging fruit throughout various theaters of war and plan exactly the best time to start a second front in earnest in Europe when they had maximum material and men. The Soviet Union did not have this luxury; they were fighting for their own national survival against the invading Nazis.

As a consequence, the Soviet Union's losses through the war were dramatic. Here's the number of war military and civilian dead for some of the Allies through World War II
  • The Soviet Union - 23,400,000
  • The United Kingdom - 450,900
  • The United States - 418,500
As Hastings puts it, it was the Soviet Union that did most of the actual dying for the Allies in WWII.

Saturday, June 18, 2011

Robert Caro's The Power Broker


I am usually in the middle of reading either a history or a historical biography. The finest biography I've ever read has been Robert Caro's multi-volume biography of Lyndon Johnson called The Years of Lyndon Johnson. Caro's been writing it since the 70's and he's working on the last volume covering LBJ's presidency now. (I've earlier written about Caro's work here.)

Caro became interested in the topic of power and Lyndon when studying Robert Moses and writing The Power Broker.

I am very excited to learn tonight that an unabridged audio version has just been published, as that is how I find the time to do most of my reading!

http://amzn.to/kgPzpx

Diners, Drive-Ins& Dives



This AM Beth and I tried Broadway Diner, located just on the other side of the Baltimore Harbor Tunnel that crosses under the Patapsco River (which forms Baltimore's Inner Harbor) that feeds into the Chesapeake Bay.

Other than being a great 24 hour Baltimore Diner, on 25 April 2009, the Broadway Diner was featured as on Guy Fieri's show Diners, Drive-Ins, & Dives. The show was called Diners You Sent Me To.

Beth and I enjoyed our meal, although you can tell from the Diner's Breakfast Menu that they're a little pricey. What made it a bit more pricey was the $4 in tolls we had to pay to travel through and then back through the tunnel. Though we arrived at 11:30 AM, the parking lot was almost completely full. We knew we were near Baltimore because the waitress called me "Honey" twice. Quintessential Baltimore, of course, would have called for the appellation "Hon." :) The food was very, very good. It was a late breakfast, so Beth actually ordered a Gyro, which came with a special sauce they make. Beth reported that the sandwich was out of this world. Her french fries which I stole were off-the-hook and I actually liked them better than my hash browns. Aesthetically, the place was very pleasing though while some of the booths featured mini-jukeboxes, some featured bar-type video game boxes that Beth and I found annoying. A unique feature of this particular Diner was a full bar. We enjoyed ourselves there and would definitely go back, though probably not often because of the prices.

I give it 4 out of 5 stars.

We've added Broadway Diner to our list:

Saturday, June 11, 2011

Towards the Quintessential Baltimore Diner: The Nautilus Diner in Crofton, MD














Beth and I this AM tried The Nautilus Diner and Restaurant in Crofton, MD, about 22 miles from our house. It questionably qualifies as a Baltimore Diner - imo - but it had its high points.

The food was pretty good, though our potatoes had a fishy taste. The service was attentive and excellent. We also enjoyed the mini-jukeboxes at each table, a throwback to the 50's. We may give it another shot, though I definitely prefer our most recent discovery, the Honey Bee Diner in Glen Burnie.

About five years ago, Kenny Sheppard and I started visiting and episodically reviewing Baltimore Diners when he was a Ph.D student at Johns Hopkins. But after Kenny abandoned our somber quest to marry Candace and move back to Canada, Beth agreed to join me in my search. Baltimore Diners have their own culture that I find fascinating. Wait staff tend to be efficient but not effusive. In the better Diners, the food is excellent. They most definitely have a blue collar feel.

So far, Kenny, Beth, and I (occasionally joined by Candace) have visited:
The quest continues.