If I were to recommend a highly perceptive and original book on the Second World War, it would be...
Blood and Ruins, The Last Imperial War, 1931-1945 by Richard Overy
It's not a "good guys/bad guys" kind of book, not a book that focuses all that much on battles, but rather on the sinews of the war, it's origins and motivations, its mechanics, but most insightfully and incisively, the
moral character and the lies that all of the participants, including the United States, told about for what they were fighting.
It's a massive book, a slow rich read, and pretty much every chapter, and the rather different structure - chronological telling is barely observed if observed at all - just rings with originality.
It is advertised on the cover as a "military history" but is anything but that. The observations are cutting and will go far in deconstructing the common accounts, stripping and exposing any triumphalism and denuding the participants, winners and losers, of any claim to morality, ripping apart any appeal to that war being a "Good War."
It points, decisively to the fact that "Good Wars" don't, and cannot exist.