 
  Patton  was champing at the bit to lead the D-Day invasion, but Eisenhower placed him in  command of a decoy unit, the First U.S. Army Group. Nearly seven weeks after  D-Day, Patton finally got his chance to take Third Army into battle. He began a  ten-month rampage across France, driving through Germany and into Nazi-occupied  Czechoslovakia and Austria. Along the way Third Army forces entered the Battle  of the Bulge, breaking the siege of Bastogne. It was a turning point in the war,  and afterward the Third Army pushed eastward again.  
 Patton’s Third Army in  World War II covers Patton’s  command of Third Army with a focus on the armor. It was a new style of fighting,  avoiding entrenched infantry warfare by continuously pushing forward, and it  appealed to Patton’s hard-charging personality. Archival photos along with  frequent quotes complete the portrait of Patton as well as his men as they fight  their way across the Third Reich.