Military Professional Reading discussion
What I'm Reading
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happy
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Aug 19, 2013 11:28PM


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That one looks extremely interesting, Happy, please let us know how you like it!
I've had a pretty good week or two in terms of getting more books, though I haven't had a lot of time to make very much progress with the ones I'm actually reading. I'm still slowly making my way through 'Sinai Victory' & 'Insurgents, etc.' as I mentioned above; I am also about halfway through











Catherine- welcome to the group; the first book that comes to mind in the category you mentioned is




For more recent British military leadership the following were all quite good:






Cathrine, I can second Liam's rec's on Churchhill's Generals and Hitler's Generals. Both offer a good overview of the leadership of the respective armies

Also these may offer some interest for you as well:




I've not read this but may be worth exploring if you can acquire a copy


Unfortunately I haven't read any of the others - TBR list expands once again :)





Warm regards
Catherine


Hear Hear Liam, and good luck with your studies Catherine.





Some interesting reviews on amazon.co.uk and amazon.com about Sir Max's book. Some are not fans of Sir Max whereas others are and the comments and discussions are interesting in the strengths and weaknesses of his account or approach - but amongst that most of the reviewers all cite

For me I'll (eventually) read both: I like Sir Max's books and also have Professor Clark's Iron Kingdom to read too.
Worthing mentioning that when Sir Max reviewed The Sleepwalkers in the London Sunday Times he wrote “One of the most impressive and stimulating studies of the period ever published.”
NB: I had to look up the review in some clippings I keep as I don't subscribe on-line to the Sunday Times as I didn't remember the quote but I recalled he'd reviewed it favourably).




In my current book on Stalingrad the author had this to say about David Glantz's recent titles on this battle:
"The outstanding study of Stalingrad that has emerged over the past thirty years is David Glantz's trilogy written in conjunction with Jonathan House. Any student of the Stalingrad battle seeking a detailed analysis of German and Soviet operational thinking and planning is obliged to read these volumes. To enjoy them at their best, to grasp the enormity of the unfolding operations, to go back to the late summer of 1942, you have to retreat into your bunker and master, ponder, and savor the detail."


A slide show form NRO that looks at where warfare is heading - robots, exoskeletons, contains 23 slides
http://www.nationalreview.com/slidesh...

"Then he left them dead behind him, and ran to where the enemy battalions fled in rout, supported by his bronze-clad Achaeans. Foot-soldiers killed others as they ran; horsemen put horsemen to the sword, while a cloud of dust rose from the ground at their feet, stirred by the thundering hooves. And King Agamemnon, racing after, shouting aloud to his Argives, never ceased from slaying. As a dense wood bows to consuming fire borne on the whirling wind, and uprooted trees collapse in the rush of flame, so the fleeing Trojans fell before Agamemnon, son of Atreus, and many a team of spirited horses dragged an empty chariot rattling through the lines, bereft of its peerless charioteers, while they lay in the dust, to the vultures’ joy and their own wives’ sorrow."



I have long held an interest in the military history of the Austrian Habsburg's and the later Austro-Hungarian empire. The many successes and too many failures of a multinational army under commanders of vastly different social and ethnic backgrounds and hamstrung by a defense system of chronic financial shortfalls is intriguing. Duffy's book is a biography of one of Austria's most successful field marshals, Maximilian von Browne, a scion of an old Irish military family and a leading example of the renowned "Wild Geese." I am only 45 pages into it, but so far so good.
Other books on the subject include the excellent --













I've recently enjoyed and am recommending three books (by two authors) - the first is a history of the V-22, well-researched and particularly interesting because it spans a few decades of modern military leadership, policy, politics, procurement, technology, etc.... The other two books, both by a Washington Post, follow the current generation of soldiers in Iraq (and, to some extent, Afghanistan, but not as much) as they deploy during the surge (the first book) and then return home, alas, all too often broken (with PTSD and TBI) - both are extremely well done:
The Dream Machine: The Untold History of the Notorious V-22 Osprey

The Good Soldiers

Thank You For Your Service

p.s. I've got a "military" shelf on my Goodreads page, but it includes a fair amount of fiction, which I understand is not the primary focus of this group.
Cheers



The author stated that Publius Ventidius Bassus was one of the best Generals Rome ever produced:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Publius_...


Have you read Flavius Josephus "The Jewish War?"



I thought it was a good look at the people, events and culture that collided to start the revolution
My thoughts for any interested
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
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