• Subscribe Now
  • Today In History
  • Wars & Events
    • The Russia–Ukraine War
    • American Revolution
    • The Civil War
    • World War I
    • World War II
    • Cold War
    • Korean War
    • Vietnam War
    • Global War on Terror
    • Movements
      • Women’s Rights
      • Civil Rights
      • Abolition of Slavery
  • Famous People
    • U.S. Presidents
    • World Leaders
    • Military Leaders
    • Outlaws & Lawmen
    • Activists
    • Artists & Writers
    • Celebrities
    • Scientists
    • Philosophers
  • Eras
    • Modern Era
      • 2000s
      • 1900s
      • 1800s
    • Early Modern
      • 1700s
      • 1600s
      • 1500s
    • The Middle Ages
    • Classical Era
    • Prehistory
  • Topics
    • Black History
    • Slavery
    • Women’s History
    • Prisoners of War
    • Firsthand Accounts
    • Technology & Weaponry
    • Aviation & Spaceflight
    • Naval & Maritime
    • Politics
    • Military History
    • Art & Literature
    • News
    • Entertainment & Culture
    • Historical Figures
    • Photography
    • Wild West
    • Social History
    • Native American History
  • Magazines
    • American History
    • America’s Civil War
    • Aviation History
    • Civil War Times
    • Military History
    • Military History Quarterly
    • Vietnam
    • Wild West
    • World War II
  • Newsletters
  • Podcasts
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
Skip to content
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
HistoryNet

HistoryNet

The most comprehensive and authoritative history site on the Internet.

  • Subscribe Now
  • Today In History
  • Wars & Events
    • The Russia–Ukraine War
    • American Revolution
    • The Civil War
    • World War I
    • World War II
    • Cold War
    • Korean War
    • Vietnam War
    • Global War on Terror
    • Movements
      • Women’s Rights
      • Civil Rights
      • Abolition of Slavery
  • Famous People
    • U.S. Presidents
    • World Leaders
    • Military Leaders
    • Outlaws & Lawmen
    • Activists
    • Artists & Writers
    • Celebrities
    • Scientists
    • Philosophers
  • Eras
    • Modern Era
      • 2000s
      • 1900s
      • 1800s
    • Early Modern
      • 1700s
      • 1600s
      • 1500s
    • The Middle Ages
    • Classical Era
    • Prehistory
  • Topics
    • Black History
    • Slavery
    • Women’s History
    • Prisoners of War
    • Firsthand Accounts
    • Technology & Weaponry
    • Aviation & Spaceflight
    • Naval & Maritime
    • Politics
    • Military History
    • Art & Literature
    • News
    • Entertainment & Culture
    • Historical Figures
    • Photography
    • Wild West
    • Social History
    • Native American History
  • Magazines
    • American History
    • America’s Civil War
    • Aviation History
    • Civil War Times
    • Military History
    • Military History Quarterly
    • Vietnam
    • Wild West
    • World War II
  • Newsletters
  • Podcasts
Posted inReview

WWII Book Review: The Taste of War

by Madhusree Mukerjee7/26/2017
Share This Article

The Taste of War: World War Two and the Battle for Food

 By Lizzie Collingham, 656 pp. The Penguin Press, 2012. $35.

 ‘We’re supposed to die of starvation, to make place for the Germans.” This was how the people of Kiev felt after Nazi occupiers began to choke off food supplies from their city in the summer of 1942. Ukrainian potatoes and chickens were sent instead to the conquerors: Joseph Goebbels announced with punning satisfaction that Germans were “digesting” the occupied territories. In Warsaw’s Jewish ghetto, minced cattle rectums became a delicacy.

The basic human need for food extended World War II’s horrors far beyond the bloody front lines. Lizzie Collingham documents in awful detail how hunger tormented hundreds of millions of people around the globe as Axis leaders and, to a lesser extent, the Allies prioritized food allocations to soldiers, war workers, and home populations—and in the process left subject peoples to starve.

Food policy shaped the course of the war to an astonishing extent. In May 1942, Hitler explained to young military officers, “It is a battle for food, a battle for the basis of life, for the raw materials the earth offers, the natural resources that lie under the soil and the fruits that it offers to the one who cultivates it.” The führer’s determination to acquire Lebensraum (room to live) not only precipitated the European conflict but also prompted the German attack on the Soviet Union. The diabolical Nazi Hunger Plan envisaged using famine to kill off Slavs, thereby releasing food and land for Germans: Collingham notes that by February 1942, 60 percent of the 3.35 million Soviet prisoners in German hands had starved to death. The Holocaust, too, originated partly in food policy: the desire to get rid of “useless eaters” helped motivate the decision to exterminate Polish Jews. Similarly, Japan invaded Manchuria and evicted Chinese and Koreans because it sought land for Japanese farmers.

Sadly, the Allies also starved civilians. Famine broke out in India when Winston Churchill favored British civilians over imperial subjects in the allocation of grain and shipping. The Allied blockade of Europe combined with appropriations by Axis occupiers to create famine in Greece. Chinese Nationalists looted so much food from local peasants that their countrymen turned against them—and, fatefully, to the communists.

This exhaustive study is a trifle too long. Nonetheless, The Taste of War serves up a devastating new perspective on the role of famine in World War II.

 

Originally published in the June 2012 issue of World War II. To subscribe, click here.

Share This Article
by Madhusree Mukerjee

more by Madhusree Mukerjee

    Dive deeper

    • Food

    Citation information

    Madhusree Mukerjee (8/25/2025) WWII Book Review: The Taste of War. HistoryNet Retrieved from https://www.historynet.com/wwii-book-review-taste-war/.
    "WWII Book Review: The Taste of War."Madhusree Mukerjee - 8/25/2025, https://www.historynet.com/wwii-book-review-taste-war/
    Madhusree Mukerjee 7/26/2017 WWII Book Review: The Taste of War., viewed 8/25/2025,<https://www.historynet.com/wwii-book-review-taste-war/>
    Madhusree Mukerjee - WWII Book Review: The Taste of War. [Internet]. [Accessed 8/25/2025]. Available from: https://www.historynet.com/wwii-book-review-taste-war/
    Madhusree Mukerjee. "WWII Book Review: The Taste of War." Madhusree Mukerjee - Accessed 8/25/2025. https://www.historynet.com/wwii-book-review-taste-war/
    "WWII Book Review: The Taste of War." Madhusree Mukerjee [Online]. Available: https://www.historynet.com/wwii-book-review-taste-war/. [Accessed: 8/25/2025]

    Related stories

    Stories

    Portfolio: Images of War as Landscape

    Whether they produced battlefield images of the dead or daguerreotype portraits of common soldiers, […]

    Stories

    Jerrie Mock: Record-Breaking American Female Pilot

    In 1964 an Ohio woman took up the challenge that had led to Amelia Earhart’s disappearance.

    Stories

    Celebrating the Legacy of the Office of Strategic Services 82 Years On

    From the OSS to the CIA, how Wild Bill Donovan shaped the American intelligence community.

    Buffalo Bill Cody
    Stories

    10 Pivotal Events in the Life of Buffalo Bill

    William Frederick Cody (1846-1917) led a signal life, from his youthful exploits with the Pony Express and in service as a U.S. Army scout to his globetrotting days as a showman and international icon Buffalo Bill.

    HistoryNet
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    • YouTube

    “History is a guide to navigation in perilous times. History is who we are and why we are the way we are.”

    David McCullough, author of “1776”

    HistoryNet.com is brought to you by HistoryNet LLC, the world’s largest publisher of history magazines. HistoryNet.com contains daily features, photo galleries and over 25,000 articles originally published in our nine magazines.

    Our Magazines

    • American History
    • America’s Civil War
    • Aviation History
    • Civil War Times
    • Military History
    • Military History Quarterly
    • Vietnam
    • Wild West
    • World War II

    About Us

    • What Is HistoryNet.com?
    • Advertise With Us
    • Careers
    • Meet Our Staff!

    Stay Curious

    Subscribe to receive our weekly newsletter with top stories from master historians.

    sign me up!

    © 2025 HistoryNet.
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Service