The Last Battle (Cornelius Ryan book)

The Last Battle is a 1966 book by Cornelius Ryan about the events leading up to the Battle of Berlin in World War II.

The book, which was published by Simon & Schuster, is structured as a historical narrative. It is based on interviews with hundreds of persons actually involved, including Americans, British, Germans and Russians. Ryan was granted unique historical access to Soviet archives and Soviet generals involved in the battle, which was rare at the time.

The book was published simultaneously in England, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Norway, Denmark, Sweden, the Netherlands, Finland and Portugal, when it appeared in March 1966.

Reception
The Last Battle made news at the time it was published. The book revealed that the German capture of a top-secret Allied plan for dividing and occupying Germany helped stiffen German resistance and prolonged World War II.

Also receiving publicity were assertions of an American general quoted in the book, General William Hood Simpson, commander of the Ninth United States Army in World War II, that he is convinced his Army "could have captured Berlin well ahead of the Russians if it had not been stopped on the Elbe River on 15 April, 1945".

The Soviet Communist Party newspaper Pravda attacked Ryan for trying to smear the Red Army in his depiction of the Battle of Berlin.

After his death, it was revealed that Ryan had written to the publisher of historian Stephen Ambrose, accusing him of plagiarizing from The Last Battle. In September 1970, Ryan wrote a letter to Ambrose's publisher, Doubleday, accusing Ambrose of using two quotations from The Last Battle in his book The Supreme Commander without attributing them to Ryan.