Clara Duval writes about the fault-lines where grand narratives crack and human choices show through. Raised on family stories of a Europe rebuilt from rubble and radio, she is drawn to the brittle promises of alliances, the seductions of propaganda, and the quiet arithmetic of logistics that outlasts slogans. Her work blends close reading of documents with a feel for memory's half-truths, asking what nations decide to forget in order to go on. In this book, she treats the Axis not as a single will but as a fragile choreography of prestige, scarcity, and impatience-an approach shaped by years spent translating between languages, archives, and living rooms. Duval's guiding conviction is simple: history is most useful when it gives us tests we can apply in the present, not just stories we can admire at a distance.