Eisenhower had so many troops at his disposal his main issue was keeping them from firing on one another. The invasion succeeded due to the vast numbers thrown at the impregnable German Atlantic Wall.
The story begins with an alcohol fuelled dispute between two brothers: one headed to fortress Europe during WW#2 and the other a JAG lawyer. The soldier dies in a German ambush during landing training; the lawyer volunteers as captain of a Sherman Tank. From the title you can discern they meet up with one of those feared German Tigers.
As becomes clear a soldier’s greatest danger came from incompetent senior officers. Hopefully the enemy got them before they caused your demise.
Once more the author uses vulgar language and his text has editing errors.
As one would expect atrocities on both sides though on the Allay side superiors issue warnings, on the German side superiors order them. Supply chain issues are critical to all war efforts. Troops must be fed and resupplied with ammo, vehicles with fuel and parts. Tanks that run out of fuel crash to a halt and guns that run out of ammo fall silent.
We see the war from Sergeant Josh Grant’s Sherman Tank but with glimpses of Rolf’s Tiger on the German side. While the Germans have to cope with Hitler, Eisenhower is saddled with Monty. A lot of the Geography we cover is familiar to us from the mini-series Band of Brothers and the Hundred and First Airborne get mention.
All of this leading up to the ultimate confrontation between Grant’s Sherman and Rolf’s Tiger. Both young men have much in common and little respect for their superiors but the circumstances of war make them mortal enemies. That match is prefigured frequently during the tale.