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OverviewIn the winter of 1939-40, the Soviet Union expected Finland to yield quickly. It had the weight of a great power: manpower, armour, artillery, aircraft, and a political system accustomed to imposing decisions by force. Finland had little of that. Yet the campaign did not unfold as a simple arithmetic of resources. In forests, along frozen lakes, and on narrow road networks, advantage had to be converted into usable combat power - moved, supplied, maintained, and commanded - and the conversion repeatedly failed at the moments that mattered most. Finland's Winter War: How a Small Nation Held Back Stalin explains the conflict as a contest between scale and operational adaptation. Leif Thornvale shows how winter warfare is not merely fighting in cold weather, but a total environment that reshapes tempo, logistics, weapons reliability, and the human capacity to endure. Through campaign case studies and decision-focused analysis, the book traces how Finnish units leveraged terrain literacy, cohesion, and flexible command to slow larger formations, disrupt supply lines, and force repeated Soviet resets. It also tracks Soviet learning: how mass and firepower could be reorganised to break fortifications, and why institutional friction slowed, unevened, and cost it. Written for general readers as well as students, historians, and analysts, the book offers more than narrative. It provides a practical framework for thinking about small-state defence: how defence in depth works as a strategy of time, why morale and legitimacy are forms of combat power, and how logistics in extreme cold can determine which tactics are even possible. Readers finish with a sharper understanding of the Winter War itself and a clearer method for evaluating future conflicts where environment, cohesion, and institutional learning may matter as much as numbers on paper. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Leif ThornvalePublisher: Vij Books Imprint: Vij Books Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.10cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.503kg ISBN: 9789377942571ISBN 10: 9377942578 Pages: 376 Publication Date: 20 April 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationLeif Thornvale is a nonfiction writer whose work sits at the meeting point of military history and strategic analysis. He is drawn to moments when large institutions collide with inconvenient realities: weather, geography, supply, and the stubborn independence of smaller societies. Across his writing, he returns to a consistent question: how do communities organise trust and initiative when plans fail, and certainty disappears?Thornvale approaches conflict history as a study of systems under stress rather than as a catalogue of battles. He is interested in how doctrine becomes practice, how organisations learn in public and under pressure, and how morale is built through leadership habits as much as through slogans. His style favours plain language, careful distinctions, and an editorial respect for what sources can and cannot prove, especially when national memory and propaganda have shaped the record.A persistent thread in his perspective is the geography of Northern Europe: borderlands where forests, lakes, and long winters complicate the promises of modern power. The Winter War, in particular, offers him a disciplined way to think about asymmetry without romance. It is a story of restraint and improvisation, of cohesion and fatigue, and of the limits that terrain imposes on even the best-resourced state. Thornvale writes for readers who want history that clarifies decisions, not history that simply reassures. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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