Defeat Into Victory
The commander of the Fourteenth Army tells how a beaten force was rebuilt to destroy the Japanese in Burma.
The Verdict
Widely regarded as the finest memoir any general produced in the war. Field Marshal Slim took a beaten, demoralized army in Burma and rebuilt it into the force that destroyed the Japanese at Imphal and Kohima — and his account of how he did it is honest about failure, generous to his soldiers, and free of the self-justification that mars most commanders' memoirs. Still taught at staff colleges, it is a masterclass in leadership as much as a history of a campaign.
Who Should Read It
Read it if you want
- The best general's memoir of the war
- Readers interested in leadership and morale
- The strategic story of the Burma campaign
- Anyone who values candor from the top
Look elsewhere if you want
- The ground-level soldier's experience (see Fraser)
- A short read — it is detailed
- The European or Pacific theaters
Why We Rated It 4.8
Historical Context
Slim commanded the Fourteenth Army — the 'Forgotten Army' — in the Burma campaign, turning the 1942 retreat into the victories of 1944–45 at Imphal, Kohima, and the Irrawaddy crossings. The memoir was first published in 1956.
Events Covered
Editions & Reading Notes
Read It Alongside
Where to Buy
ISBN: 978-0815410225
Other Books About the Same Events
More by Field Marshal William Slim
Frequently Asked Questions
- Why is Defeat Into Victory so highly regarded?
- It combines authoritative military history with unusual honesty about mistakes and a deep respect for ordinary soldiers, and is still studied as a model of command.
- What should I read alongside it?
- George MacDonald Fraser's Quartered Safe Out Here gives the private soldier's view of the same campaign.