Current reading: June 2021
ConversazioniMilitary History
Iscriviti a LibraryThing per pubblicare un messaggio.
1Shrike58
Kicking off the month with At War's Summit, an examination of Soviet misadventures in mountain warfare, particularly in Trans-Caucasian. The author's father was a Russian officer of ski troops in the Great Patriotic War, and he pulls no punches in regards to the issues of making war under the liabilities of the Stalinist mentality. However, Statiev is an equal-opportunity critic, as he equally hammers Germany military romanticism.
2rocketjk
>1 Shrike58: That looks really interesting. Is it well written/translated?
3Shrike58
Pretty well written and the fellow is, apparently, a Canadian national, and an accomplished outdoorsman; very acerbic though.
4Shrike58
Finished up Sukhoi Interceptors; quite good, though I think that the authors (understandably), give the Soviet performance in the KAL 007 Incident a little too much benefit of the doubt (certainly more than I give the USN in the "Vincennes" Incident).
5Shrike58
Done with Fighting for Atlanta, another of the author's books dealing with the impact of field fortifications on the American Civil War. Dense stuff, but one appreciates the effort.
6jztemple
Finished an enjoyable Washington's General: Nathanael Greene and the Triumph of the American Revolution by Terry Golway.
7Shrike58
Wrapping up the month with more American Civil War, in the form of Yankee Warhorse, what's mostly a military life of Peter Osterhaus. Unlike Forgotten Bastards of the Eastern Front and The Right Wrong Man, which I basically regard as social and diplomatic history, Townsend's book is mostly a drums & trumpets battle history, and a pretty good one.
8jztemple
Completed a short Wellington Bomber by Edward Bishop, which is part of Ballantine's Illustrated History of World War II and Ballantine's Illustrated History of the Violent Century.