Sniping Rifles on the Eastern Front 1939–45

Martin Pegler author Johnny Shumate illustrator Alan Gilliland illustrator

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Published:21st Mar '19

£14.99

Available to order, but very limited on stock - if we have issues obtaining a copy, we will let you know.

Sniping Rifles on the Eastern Front 1939–45 cover

Featuring specially commissioned artwork, this absorbing book investigates the technology and tactics employed by snipers on both sides on the Eastern Front of World War II in a host of battles from Leningrad to Berlin.

The Soviet Union had developed a significant sniping force by 1939, but the extraordinary skill and cunning displayed by Finnish snipers during the Winter War forced the Soviets to innovate. On the other side, German sniping suffered from a lack of standardization of weapons and a lack of marksmen deployed at the start of the Great Patriotic War (1941–45). There were few heroes in the conflict, but on both sides, the snipers were idolized – especially on the Soviet side, gaining almost mythical status. As well as traditional bolt-action weapons, both sides used several types of semi-automatic rifle, such as the SVT-38 and the Gew 41. Offering greater firepower at the expense of long-range accuracy, such weapons would be profoundly influential in the postwar world. Fully illustrated, this absorbing study investigates the development of sniping weapons and techniques on World War II’s Eastern Front.

ISBN: 9781472825896

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 266g

80 pages