World War 2 Books
recommended by historians and novelists
Last updated: March 16, 2026
Five Books has extensive coverage of World War II. British military historian Antony Beevor recommends his best books on World War II as a whole, but we also have interviews dedicated to specific battles. We also have a collection of D-Day books and books about the bombing of Pearl Harbor.
One of the most brilliant accounts of World War II from a Russian perspective is the novel Life and Fate by Vasily Grossman. It's been recommended by a number of our interviewees as a great read, including the late and great military historian Michael Howard. Also a must-read is Ordinary Men by Christopher Browning, for its insight into how 'ordinary' Germans got involved in perpetrating the Holocaust in Eastern Europe.
No account of World War 2 is complete without some of the memoirs of people who lived during it. The Diary of Anne Frank, which many of us read as teenagers, remains unmissable, as is Maus, the graphic novel Art Spiegelman wrote about his father's experience in Poland. Other heartbreaking memoirs are Elie Wiesel's Night and Primo Levi's If This Is a Man. Less well-known but twice recommended on Five Books is A Woman in Berlin.
If you prefer reading novels, we also have World War 2 historical fiction recommendations and an interview on World War II novels.
World War II Novels, recommended by Lori Inglis Hall
World War II forced people of many nationalities into extraordinary circumstances, says Lori Inglis Hall—whose debut novel follows two twins forced apart by the conflict. Here, she recommends five of the best novels set during World War II, both historical fiction and novels written immediately after or during the war by eyewitnesses.
The best books on World War II, recommended by Antony Beevor
The popular military historian Antony Beevor recommends some of his own favourite books about the Second World War.
-

1
Stalingrad
by Antony Beevor -

2
The Longest Day
by Cornelius Ryan -

3
Reach for the Sky: The Story of Douglas Bader, Hero of the Battle of Britain
by Paul Brickhill -

4
To Hell and Back: The Classic Memoir of World War II by America's Most Decorated Soldier
by Audie Murphy -

5
The War: A Memoir
by Marguerite Duras
The best books on World War II Battles, recommended by Alex Kershaw
The best books on World War II Battles, recommended by Alex Kershaw
In World War II human beings were tested over and over again, and that is part of what explains its enduring fascination, says bestselling historian Alex Kershaw. He recommends five books of great storytelling that immerse you in the drama, the heroism and the tragedy of World War II and also have the benefit of being relatively short.
-

1
Auschwitz and After
by Charlotte Delbo -

2
Man's Search for Meaning
by Viktor Frankl -

3
The Search: The Birkenau Boys
by Gerhard Durlacher -

4
The Frankfurt Auschwitz Trial, 1963-1965: Genocide, History and the Limits of the Law
by Devin O Pendas -

5
Underground in Berlin: A Young Woman's Extraordinary Tale of Survival in the Heart of Nazi Germany
by Marie Jalowicz-Simon
The best books on Auschwitz, recommended by Mary Fulbrook
The best books on Auschwitz, recommended by Mary Fulbrook
Why were so few of the Nazis involved in running Auschwitz brought to justice? Why did some Germans during the Holocaust risk death to hide Jewish people from Nazi persecution, while others were passive bystanders? Historian Mary Fulbrook—author of Reckonings, which won the 2019 Wolfson History Prize—recommends essential reading for understanding Auschwitz and its aftermath.
The Best World War 2 Historical Fiction
The dramatic events and scope of World War 2 make it one of the most popular settings for historical fiction. The range of books varies widely, from real-life stories written up as novels, to entirely fictional accounts which use one or more of the many horrific events of World War II as backdrop.
-

1
Towards the Setting Sun: An Escape from the Thailand-Burma Railway
by James B. Bradley -

2
Down to Bedrock: The Diary and Secret Notes of a Far East Prisoner of War Chaplain 1942-1945
by Eric Cordingly -

3
To the Kwai and Back: War Drawings 1939-1945
by Ronald Searle -

4
Burma Railway Medicine: Disease, Death and Survival on the Thai-Burma Railway
by Geoff Gill & Meg Parkes -

5
The Narrow Road to the Deep North
by Richard Flanagan
The best books on The Burma Railway, recommended by Jacqueline Passman
The best books on The Burma Railway, recommended by Jacqueline Passman
Among the many horrors of World War II was the construction of the Burma–Thailand Railway, where tens of thousands of prisoners dropped dead of illness, exhaustion, and malnutrition, and once strong young men were reduced to skeletal frames of flesh. Jacqueline Passman, daughter of a British prisoner of war, talks to us about the experiences of her father, Harry Silman, a doctor with the British Army who was there and kept a diary, now published for the first time.
-
1
Russia at War
by Alexander Werth -

2
A Writer At War: Vasily Grossman with the Red Army 1941-1945
by Vasily Grossman, edited and translated by Antony Beevor and Lyuba Vinogradova -

3
Reflections on the Russian Soul
by Dmitry Likhachov -

4
Less Than One
by Joseph Brodsky -

5
Conversations with Stalin
by Milovan Djilas
The best books on The Siege of Leningrad, recommended by Anna Reid
The best books on The Siege of Leningrad, recommended by Anna Reid
Glorified by Russia, glossed over by the West, the siege of Leningrad is rarely seen for what it was – a tragic story of tremendous suffering and death. The author of Leningrad, Anna Reid, tells us what really happened there
The best books on The Holocaust, recommended by Steven Katz
In the years immediately after World War II, the Holocaust was little studied. That all changed with the publication of Raul Hilberg’s book, The Destruction of the European Jews. Steven Katz, professor of Jewish Holocaust Studies at Boston University and former Director of the Elie Wiesel Center for Jewish Studies, introduces the best Holocaust books.
Novels and Memoirs of World War II, recommended by James Holland
Historian and novelist James Holland talks us through some of his favourite memoirs and novels about the Second World War and explains his lifelong fascination with the global conflict.
-

1
My Early Life 1874-1904
by Winston Churchill -

2
Churchill and the Islamic World: Orientalism, Empire and Diplomacy in the Middle East
by Warren Dockter -

3
In Command of History: Churchill Fighting and Writing the Second World War
by David Reynolds -

4
Churchill and the Dardanelles
by Christopher M Bell -

5
Winston Churchill As I Knew Him
by Violet Bonham Carter
The best books on Winston Churchill, recommended by Richard Toye
The best books on Winston Churchill, recommended by Richard Toye
Winston Churchill’s role as a global statesman remains immensely controversial. For some he was the heroic champion of liberty, saviour of the free world; for others a callous imperialist with a doleful legacy. Here, historian Richard Toye chooses the best books to help you understand the man behind the myths and Churchill’s own role in making those myths.

































































































