You didn't ask for my Eastern Europe/Central Europe historical reading list.
No, you offered your eastern front reading list. But if your other reading lists are more combat-narratives, they aren't going to interest me much. I burned out on that stuff many years ago. I do have around here a copy of Stalin's War by McMeekin, but I can't get into it. I am sick to death of Stalin. Moreso because Putin is emulating him. Latest acquisition is a book on Lev Gumilev, another one of those political "philosophers" I call Putin's Guidestars. More to the point today than knowing details of who blew up whose tanks in 1943. Amazon still owes me Snyder's The Reconstruction of Nations which I am looking forward to. Gumilev may have to wait a bit.