Books
- Bercuson, D.J. The Secret Army. Toronto: Lester & Orpen Dennys, 1983.
- Bercuson, D.J. & Herwig, H, One Christmas in Washington: The Secret Meeting Between Roosevelt and Churchill that Changed the World, New York: Overlook Press, 2005. Also, London: Weidenfeld, and Toronto: McArthur & Co.
- Bercuson, D.J. & Herwig, H. The Destruction of the Bismarck, New York: Overlook Press, 2001; also Toronto: Stoddart, 2001; London: Hutchinson, 2002.
- Bercuson, D.J. The Patricias. Toronto: Stoddart, 2001.
- Bercuson, D.J. Blood on the Hills: The Canadian Army in the Korean War. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1999.
- Bercuson, D.J., Granatstein, J.L., & Bothwell, R., Petrified Campus: The Crisis in Canada's Universities, Toronto: Random House of Canada, 1997.
- Bercuson, D.J. & Herwig, H. Deadly Seas: The Story of the St.Croix, the U305 and the Battle of the Atlantic, Toronto: Random House of Canada, 1997.
- Bercuson, D.J. Significant Incident: Canada's Army, the Airborne, and the Murder in Somalia, Toronto: McClelland and Stewart, 1996.
- Bercuson, D.J. Maple Leaf Against the Axis, Canada's Second World War, Toronto: Stoddart, 1995; Tokyo: Sairyusha, 2003 (Japanese translation).
- Bercuson, D.J. Battalion of Heroes: The Calgary Highlanders in World War Two
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“Most books belong to the house and street only, and in the fields their leaves feel very thin. They are bare and obvious, and have no halo nor haze about them. Nature lies far and fair behind them all. But this, as it proceeds from, so it addresses, what is deepest and most abiding in man. It belongs to the noontide of the day, the midsummer of the year, and after the snows have melted, and the waters evaporated in the spring, still its truth speaks freshly to our experience.”
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“Writers ought to be regarded as wrongdoers who deserve to be acquitted or pardoned only in the rarest cases: that would be a way to keep books from getting out of hand.”
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“Indeed, the best books have a use, like sticks and stones, which is above or beside their design, not anticipated in the preface, not concluded in the appendix. Even Virgils poetry serves a very different use to me today from what it did to his contemporaries. It has often an acquired and accidental value merely, proving that man is still man in the world.”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)