Matthew Calbraith Perry: Antebellum Sailor and Diplomat Review

Matthew Calbraith Perry: Antebellum Sailor and Diplomat
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This is the first biography of this great Naval Hero in years. It was worth the wait. The significance of Perry's opening of Japan as well as his other accomplishments is amazing.
This story is told in an interesting, engaging way that will interest even the casual readers of history. Enjoy!

Click Here to see more reviews about: Matthew Calbraith Perry: Antebellum Sailor and Diplomat



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Matthew Calbraith Perry: Antebellum Sailor and Diplomat

Read More...

Semmes: Rebel Raider (Military Profiles) Review

Semmes: Rebel Raider (Military Profiles)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Veteran historian John M. Taylor provides a small vantage point on the Civil War at sea, through the personna of Confederate commerce raider Raphael Semmes, in this Potomac Military Profiles entry. The naval aspects of the Civil War tend to be neglected in most histories; Semmes might have shone in any naval war.
Taylor opens his narrative with an account of the famous duel between Semmes' CSS Alabama and the USS Kearsarge off Cherbourg, France, in June 1864. Semmes was ill-advised to seek the confrontation; the sinking of the Alabama essentially ended his career at sea. However, as Taylor proceeds to relate, Semmes had his reasons to be confident, even risk-taking.
The author quickly sketches Semmes' youth and his early career in the US Navy, including his adventures afloat and ashore in the Mexican War. The narrative properly gets underway with Semmes' bold voyage of commerce raiding with CSS Sumpter, 1861-1862. The Sumpter would end up blockaded in harbor at Gibralter; the Confederacy found Semmes a bigger, better vessel. His two year voyage with CSS Alabama was marked by a string of prizes taken in the Caribbean Sea, and the Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific Oceans. Mostly notably, Semmes won a ship on ship fight with USS Hatteras off Galveston, Texas, in 1863.
Semmes was an unreconstructed Southerner who moreover was despised by Northerners during and after the war for alleged piracy. Taylor has brought his outstanding naval career back into the foreground with "Semmes: Rebel Raider", which is highly recommended to students of the Civil War.


Click Here to see more reviews about: Semmes: Rebel Raider (Military Profiles)

One man-Capt. Raphael Semmes-dominates the history of Confederate naval operations in the American Civil War. Although the Confederates were hopelessly outnumbered at sea, Semmes roamed the oceans first in the CSS SUMTER and then the CSS ALABAMA, capturing nearly 100 Federal merchant ships and precipitating a flight from the American flag that decimated the Federal merchant marine. Revered in the South as a hero, the North reviled and feared the Yankee-hating Semmes as a pirate. Regardless of his reputation, his wartime exploits were remarkable.Noted historian and biographer John M. Taylor illustrates how, under Semmes's command, the ALABAMA became a household name in America and overseas and struck fear into the hearts of ships' crews and passengers alike. Incredibly, Semmes and the ALABAMA traveled 75,000 miles, and as far east as Singapore, without ever taking refuge in a Confederate port. In 1864, off the coast of Cherbourg, France, the Union's USS KEARSAGE finally caught up with the Confederate raider and fought the last ever ship-to-ship gun duel between wooden warships.

Buy Now

Click here for more information about Semmes: Rebel Raider (Military Profiles)

Read More...

Rules of Engagement Review

Rules of Engagement
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
an excellent first novel showing a racy, narrative style and a credible storyline with finely-drawn characters. The novel starts out aboard a US carrier, moves to naval intelligence and a several year investigation into espionage, culminating in a chase over many international frontiers into a military denouement in Africa. Good understanding of military matters and inter-service rivalries and a few subtle touches of romance make this a very good read for those who like Clancy, Patrick Robinson, Michael diMercurio and Peter Deutermann

Click Here to see more reviews about: Rules of Engagement



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Rules of Engagement

Read More...

The Pursuit of Victory: The Life And Achievement of Horatio Nelson Review

The Pursuit of Victory: The Life And Achievement of Horatio Nelson
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
As others have noted, there are many biographies of Nelson, and almost all of them suffer from the same problem: that a man so brilliant, talented, contradictory, demented, jealous, generous, gracious, foolish, naive and clear-thinking is very hard to understand. The fact that his death at the triumphant British naval victory of Trafalgar in 1805 immediately turned his life into legend, means that from first to last it's been hard to get a handle on Nelson the flawed but unique human being.
I've read many biographies of the man, and I was shocked to find that many second-hand truths fine biographers have relied on in prior biographies are incorrect. Knight's meticulous scholarship, his lifetime of study of the age of fighting sail in Britain and France, means that his careful analysis of sources in this book is stunning and irrefutable. No book I have ever read on Nelson is so thorough in finding every possible source to illuminate the daily life at sea, as well as by land, of this remarkable leader. That he quietly sets the record straight on innumerable myths and errors of past biographies with grace is simply another pleasure of the book. The fact that Knight deals tautly with the fairly disastrous consequences of Nelson's affair with Emma, Lady Hamilton, without letting it swallow his book, is a fine achievement. The heart of Nelson's importance in English history lies in his life at sea, and there Knight's study is especially enlightening.
Although not a book for everyone - you need to want to learn about both Nelson and the Royal Navy during the Napoleonic Wars - I tend to agree with the dust jacket blurb, that this book will be THE definitive factual study of Nelson. But as Knight himself admits - in the end, the whole of the man is greater than the sum of his parts, and probably always will be.

Click Here to see more reviews about: The Pursuit of Victory: The Life And Achievement of Horatio Nelson



Buy Now

Click here for more information about The Pursuit of Victory: The Life And Achievement of Horatio Nelson

Read More...

The Genesis of the Naval Profession Review

The Genesis of the Naval Profession
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Navy Captain Endorses "Genesis": I just realized that Elias' book has not yet been reviewed. I will provide a review in greater detail later, but for naval officers who run across this book, YOU SHOULD READ THIS BOOK. While some of the finer points of dates/places in the work may be debated, it is nonetheless an important addition to a naval officer's library. This work, which explores back almost 500 years the genesis of OUR profession, is sure to become a classic.
More later.

Click Here to see more reviews about: The Genesis of the Naval Profession

Moelker and Mennell have compiled a strong reflection of the brilliant work of sociologist Elias. . . Elias's sociology is a rich addition to the literature of stratification, military scholarship, conflict sociology, and understanding the concept of institutional development. . . Recommended.""Choice

Buy Now

Click here for more information about The Genesis of the Naval Profession

Read More...

Red Star over the Pacific: China's Rise and the Challenge to U.S. Maritime Strategy Review

Red Star over the Pacific: China's Rise and the Challenge to U.S. Maritime Strategy
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
China's maritime capacity, two associate professors of strategy at the US Naval War College argue in an important new work, is close to reaching a point where its theories will be put into practice. What this commanding of the seas "with Chinese characteristics" will look like, and what it will imply for regional stability and the ability of the US to remain involved in the region, is the focus of Toshi Yoshihara and James R. Holmes' Red Star Over the Pacific.
While there is no dearth of studies on the People's Liberation Army Navy (PLAN), efforts to understand it have for the most part been limited to the Order of Battle -- that is, tallying up what China currently deploys, plans to deploy and is developing. Much less effort, however, has been put into understanding China's maritime doctrine, and this is where Yoshihara and Holmes' book, which assesses a variety of Chinese-language sources and pronouncements on the subject, provides helpful illumination.
As "Western apathy toward traditional sea power" manifests itself, the authors write, "Asians bolt together fleets with gusto." Spearheading this effort is China, which has already built power-projection capabilities for what they call a "post-Taiwan" environment. Whether this rise will be benign and focused on non-traditional challenges (such as anti-piracy and protecting sea lanes) rather than "pounding away at enemy fleets" is something that can, if only imperfectly, be extracted from trends in Chinese defense circles.
Although the authors do not predict a cataclysmic clash of navies as seen during World War II between the US and Japan, they nevertheless argue that the "material ingredients for competition and rivalry are certainly present in the tight confines of the East Asian littoral."
In such a rapidly evolving environment, what Chinese naval experts are reading, saying and writing can provide important clues. And what many Chinese are reading, the authors tell us, is Alfred Thayer Mahan, the 19th century US Navy flag officer and military historian whose concept of sea power had an enormous influence on navies around the world. If Chinese strategists are selective in their usage of Mahan's theories and accept its martial themes uncritically, it is possible Beijing will follow along the lines of Germany and Japan to sea power, which in the authors' view would imply dim prospects for the region.
While the Chinese defense community is not monolithic, some Chinese analysts have tended to "gravitate toward the more memorable passages of Mahan's works for their own narrow purposes, ratifying predetermined conclusions" with Mahan furnishing the "geopolitical logic for an offensive Chinese naval strategy" and Mao Zedong thought providing the tactics to execute that strategy.
In some quarters, Chinese theorists have argued that China should achieve a national resurgence from "continental civilization" -- Mao's inward-looking strategy -- to "maritime civilization" and have made the case for national greatness as an inextricable component of sea power, a position that Yoshihara and Holmes see as "unmistakably Mahanian."
Based on their reading of the Chinese debate and signaling on its maritime strategy, the authors conclude that China's march to the sea and efforts to deny access to others will not end with Taiwan (though securing it would provide substantial advantages in power projection within and beyond the first island chain). China, they argue, will "strive to achieve and ensure access for itself -- and amass the capacity to deny access to others -- in concentric geographic rings ripping out from the Chinese coastline."
As it built its capabilities, the authors argue that Beijing carefully managed its maritime rise "to avoid setting in motion a cycle of naval challenges and response like the one that drove Anglo-German enmity," and therefore have so far succeeded where Germany failed. A factor that has helped China assuage fears of its naval rise, they write, is that unlike the German case, the Chinese naval threat remains largely distant and abstract to its potential targets, especially in the case of US policymakers and taxpayers. Given its geographical proximity to the UK, Germany had no such room to maneuver and an alarmed London mobilized accordingly to keep the scorpion in the bottle.
Despite cutbacks and other priorities, there is no doubt that the US remains a major actor and guarantor of security in Asia. As the Chinese navy expands its area of operation -- and barring a US pullout from the region -- the potential for friction between the two navies will increase. To Chinese eyes, the uncontested US presence in the East Asian seas is akin to the Chinese Nationalist Party's (KMT) strategy of "encirclement and suppression" during the Chinese Civil War, the authors write, adding that the response to this encirclement is likely to be similar to that adopted by Mao, which is to elongate the war and tire out the enemy. Chinese naval strategists also often talk about prying the control of the waters west of the first island chain from the US Navy.
Employing its deep continental interior, China's strategy aims to use of bases from which to strike targets in littoral sea areas, the authors say. As the range of its weapons increases, the PLA can employ its strategic depth to "draw enemies deep into Chinese territory before striking a devastating counterblow," a strategy that, as the authors point out, would have found favor with Mao. Given this strategy and the continental pull that continues to animate PLA strategy, it is likely the Chinese will prefer to keep the PLAN close to home, and there are questions whether it would feel confident dispatching fleets for independent operations beyond shore-based cover. Which platforms China deploys in the coming years should serve as an indicator of its preferred strategy, though according to the authors we can expect a mix of both.
The central section of the book -- "Fleet Tactics with Chinese Characteristics," "Missile and Antimissile Interaction at Sea" and "China's Emerging Undersea Nuclear Deterrent" -- touches on more technical aspects of naval warfare, but does so with commendable clarity and in a way that will prove appealing, even to readers who are not military experts. One conclusion that can be reached from this section is that the US ships equipped with the Aegis radar and missile system would be a priority target.
This discussion is followed by a section on China's "soft power" at sea, mostly through the use of the Chinese mariner Zheng He narrative, which dovetails with Beijing's continued efforts to portray its rise in peaceful, and therefore non-threatening, terms. The book concludes with a discussion of the future of US naval strategy in Asia.
Cautionary though never alarmist, Red Star over the Pacific is a superb addition to the growing body of literature on Chinese military power and strategy. Future architects of naval strategy for the region should study the prescriptions contained in this volume with great care to ensure that China's march to the sea is addressed with both the firmness and balance that is required.
(Originally published in the Taipei Times, Jan. 30, 2011, p. 14.)

Click Here to see more reviews about: Red Star over the Pacific: China's Rise and the Challenge to U.S. Maritime Strategy



Buy NowGet 34% OFF

Click here for more information about Red Star over the Pacific: China's Rise and the Challenge to U.S. Maritime Strategy

Read More...

War, Technology, and Experience aboard the USS Monitor Review

War, Technology, and Experience aboard the USS Monitor
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
One reviewer called this book, "a gem of a book... promises to be one of those small classics in the history of technology that sets a new standard for how the core questions of the field are framed and addressed." Right on! It's also a small classic in that it brings carefully documented history in the reach of the ordinary literate reader. This book is so well written that it reads like an adventure story rather than a dry history. It also debunks the myths about the Monitor that we learned as children, showing that the designer, the seamen, the politicians all contributed in their own ways to the myths. By referring to the diaries of one of the officers of the ship, the book brings every detail to rich and human life. We share the insights of the famous political and literary figures of the day, from Abraham Lincoln to Nathaniel Hawthorne to Herman Melville. We learn what really happened at Hampton Roads and what it all means for us today. And we learn about how "Smart weapons displace heroism from the field to the laboratory, from warriors to engineers, and from spectacle to secrecy." Everyone interested in the history of technology, the history of war, and the ways writers interpret events of the day will want to read this fine little book.

Click Here to see more reviews about: War, Technology, and Experience aboard the USS Monitor



Buy Now

Click here for more information about War, Technology, and Experience aboard the USS Monitor

Read More...

First Blue: The Story of World War II Ace Butch Voris and the Creation of the Blue Angels Review

First Blue: The Story of World War II Ace Butch Voris and the Creation of the Blue Angels
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
The Navy's Blue Angels are ambassadors of American ingenuity, prowess and accomplishment in the air. They are the premiere flight demonstration team in the world and proud symbol of not only Naval Aviation, but the entire US Navy. Their aerial acrobatics thrill million of spectators every year. Their show is always a major highlight of Commissioning Week at Annapolis. Nobody knows reliably how many people were influenced to join the Navy by the Blue Angels, but it is a considerable number.
How did they start? How have they endured for 58 years since their founding in 1946? What basic tenets underpin their success?
This, and much more, is the subject of a new book, "First Blue: The Story of World War II Ace Butch Voris and the Creation of the Blue Angels" by Bob Wilcox. This Book should appeal to anyone who has felt the thrill of aviation in their veins while watching a Blue Angels air show. It should also appeal to a broader audience. With a great story to tell, Wilcox has crafted a stirring naval action narrative that often reads like an adventure novel-covering Voris' entire life. The story ranges from heroic, tragic, humorous to absurd, but is always spellbinding.
Today Butch Voris is one of approximately 70 inductees in the Naval Aviation Hall of Honor in Pensacola, Fl. When he was selected to start the Navy Flight Demonstration Team, he was only a 26 year old, Pacific veteran and ace, a fighter pilot passing along the hard lessons learned in WWII by teaching tactics at NAS Jacksonville. With the war over, the Navy, worried about recruitment, decided they needed something special to attract positive attention for recruiting purposes.
The years before the war had seen military flight demonstration teams come and go. There was trepidation about starting another because the nation was reaping a peace dividend and Congress might see an air show enterprise as superfluous. The Navy decided to go ahead anyway. Voris was told to take his startup practices out over the Everglades so that if there were any crashes, only the alligators would know. Resources were initially limited to those on hand in the training command.
What magic has carried the Blue Angels from these humble beginnings to world renown? How did a newly minted LCDR, a product of the NavCad Program, with only two years of college education, come to be selected as the first leader of the Blues.? "First Blue" succinctly covers the events that shaped Voris in the crucible of the Pacific War and prepared him, after little more than five years Navy service, to create the Blue Angels and the Blue Angel culture of success.
After seeing a naval aviation recruiting poster, he started his career in early 1941. By fall 1942, he was on the Enterprise in some of the darkest days of the Pacific War. He participated in several of the Naval Actions in the Battle for Guadalcanal. Voris also flew to Guadacanal, became part of the vaunted "Cactus Air Force," shot down his first Japanese Zero, was in turn shot down, nearly dying in the process.
But he survived and came back for a second cruise with Hornet and the fast carriers in 1944 as they hit Tarawa, Guam, Iwo Jima, Chi Chi Jima and other islands through the Central and North Pacific. He was involved in several key battles like the Battle of the Philipine Sea including key subplots the Marianas "Turkey Shoot" and the "Mission into Darkness." He is credited with eight air to air victories over Zeros during two tours along with some amazing flying feats like participating in the Navy's first night fighter squardron.
Through this intense combat, he got to work for and with some of the finest leaders the US Navy has ever produced. O'Hare, Flately, Dean, Clark, and Thatch to name a few. This on the job training, coupled with a solid family upbringing, provided a lifetime of leadership training. This proved to be invaluable, along with Voris' passion for perfection and amazing flying skills, in forming the Blues.
Applying these basic tenets of leadership and organizational development almost by instinct, Voris created an organization that is an extension of the Navy's finest WWII aviation leaders, with the excellence and momentum to sustain, adapt and improve over time. Teamwork; competitive spirit; demanding and accepting only the best from personnel and equipment; striving for perfection with true dedication and a real sense of urgency ; learning from every show, practice and team member; never being satisfied: and perhaps most important, leading by example from the front, but with a sense of confident, humbleness. The Blue Angels represent the best the Navy has to offer. Voris planned it that way. "First Blue" tells this definitive Blue Angel story well.

Click Here to see more reviews about: First Blue: The Story of World War II Ace Butch Voris and the Creation of the Blue Angels



Buy Now

Click here for more information about First Blue: The Story of World War II Ace Butch Voris and the Creation of the Blue Angels

Read More...

Introduction of the Ironclad Warship (Classics of Naval Literature) Review

Introduction of the Ironclad Warship (Classics of Naval Literature)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This is a must-read for anyone interested in ironclad development. Well written and thorough, it provides a great foundational read for anyone interested in the field. Newer books cover specific ships or technologies in more detail and are frequently based on newly found archival information, but this book provides the sweep and scope they miss. It is not highly technical. Great history well written.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Introduction of the Ironclad Warship (Classics of Naval Literature)



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Introduction of the Ironclad Warship (Classics of Naval Literature)

Read More...

American and British Aircraft Carrier Development, 1919-1941 Review

American and British Aircraft Carrier Development, 1919-1941
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
There are many good insights and much worthwhile information here. But there is no apparent organization of ideas, either among the chapters, within a chapter, within a page or sometimes within a paragraph. Ideas and facts are presented, and repeated later, as if this were several slightly different articles on the same subject laid end-to-end. We are told about the movie "Helldivers" at least twice, for instance, and both times it is introduced as if new; and many times it is repeated that the Royal Navy did not have an institutional way of resolving technical aviation issues, while the USN had an interaction among BuAer, the War College and Fleet exercises. This repetition (in a book of only 200 pages) masks the fact that there is not really a book's worth of information here, and that and the poor organization mean that many important questions just aren't brought up (like, just how were the personnel policies for Naval Aviators decided? What actually were the options considered at various points in time?). It also masks some flaws in logic: the authors are fond of saying that the interwar navies were like cash-strapped gamblers in a casino, who could not afford to lose, and so spread their bets evenly. Apart from the implicit assumption that a rich man can afford to lose everything, this is an excellent way to military disaster, making onself weak everywhere; and it is not explained how refusing to make a choice among options is actually making a choice. Neither is the book particularly well-written; in too many places I had to go over again a sentence or paragraph, trying to figure out just what the authors were trying to say. "Related to the concept of cost is that of risk"--immediately after two paragraphs apparently discussing risk. This book might be useful to find some facts and ideas not otherwise immediately available; or, I would hope, as an inspiration for a more thorough and organized study.--CDR, USNR, ret.

Click Here to see more reviews about: American and British Aircraft Carrier Development, 1919-1941

The development of aircraft carriers and carrieroperations sparked a revolution in military affairs, changingcompletely and irrevocably the prosecution of war at sea. Previousstudies and histories of carrier aviation have focused on just one ortwo factors, such as individual leadership or advances in aviationtechnology, to explain the development of carrier forces. By contrast,this new history compares the development of carriers and carrieraircraft by two very different navies to illuminate the many factorsthat effect the adoption of new military technology.Focusing on the critical years after World War I, the authors tracethe personal, organizational, and institutional elements that movedthe U.S. Navy and the Royal Navy along different paths of aircraftcarrier development and operations. In a clear, almost conversationaltone the authors draw on years of research to explain why and how theRoyal Navy lost its once considerable lead in carrier doctrine andcarrier aircraft development to the Americans in the years after 1919.Originally asked to produce a study for the Office of the Secretary ofDefense that would maximize the value of decreasing defense fundsthrough wise investment in new technologies, the authors revised andexpanded that work after a wide-ranging, international search forpreviously unused primary sources. This new effort offers bothcompelling history and a trenchant essay on how and why militaryorganizations adopt and develop revolutionary technology. Itsunconventional approach should appeal to readers interested in modernnaval history and in revolutions in military affairs.

Buy Now

Click here for more information about American and British Aircraft Carrier Development, 1919-1941

Read More...

British Battleships: Warrior 1860 to Vanguard 1950 : A History of Design, Construction and Armament Review

British Battleships: Warrior 1860 to Vanguard 1950 : A History of Design, Construction and Armament
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Although written for naval buffs, this book will be of interest to anyone involved in the design of systems. With the coming of steam propulsion, naval architects and technologists had to find the right balance between the three elements of speed, gunpower, and armoured protection. It took them a hundred years, and - the common fate of all systems - as soon as they reached perfection the whole conception of the batleship was obselete. This book (huge, 700 pages in 11 x 9inch format) details the successes, the blind alleys, the debates and personalities - and every British battleship ever built, and the designs of the ones that weren't.

Click Here to see more reviews about: British Battleships: Warrior 1860 to Vanguard 1950 : A History of Design, Construction and Armament



Buy Now

Click here for more information about British Battleships: Warrior 1860 to Vanguard 1950 : A History of Design, Construction and Armament

Read More...

America's Fighting Admirals: Winning the War at Sea in World War II Review

America's Fighting Admirals: Winning the War at Sea in World War II
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
The American naval actions of the second world war were some of the most dramatic in the history of sea warfare, taking place over the Atlantic and Pacific oceans alike with an admiral overseeing each action and battle. The battles are here described from the perspective of American admirals who fought them and comes from a World War II navy veteran who not only covers all major campaigns and admiral leaders, but analyzes strategy and decision-making challenges during battle. Serious World War II military collections, particularly those with strong naval history sections, need AMERICA'S FIGHTING ADMIRALS: WINNING THE WAR AT SEA IN WORLD WAR II.

Click Here to see more reviews about: America's Fighting Admirals: Winning the War at Sea in World War II



Buy NowGet 27% OFF

Click here for more information about America's Fighting Admirals: Winning the War at Sea in World War II

Read More...

Dark Sky, Black Sea: Aircraft Carrier Night and All-Weather Operations Review

Dark Sky, Black Sea: Aircraft Carrier Night and All-Weather Operations
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This is a sound history of U.S. Navy night operations from the beginning to the present. Along the way, the reader picks up a lot of carrier lore that applies equally to day operations. What distinguishes this book from the usual Naval Institute Press study is that Mr. Brown was one of the aviators that he's writing about. Where he can, he gives first-person recollections, and throughout the book he relies heavily on interviews with fellow aviators.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Dark Sky, Black Sea: Aircraft Carrier Night and All-Weather Operations

Brown was a US Navy pilot involved in night flying from carriers for many years. He traces the history of the practice from the early experiments in the 1920s through the wars that followed to the naval air combat during the war against Iraq when night flying was common. He looks at how changes in

Buy Now

Click here for more information about Dark Sky, Black Sea: Aircraft Carrier Night and All-Weather Operations

Read More...

In the Hands of Fate: The Story of Patrol Wing Ten : 8 December 1941-11 May 1942 Review

In the Hands of Fate: The Story of Patrol Wing Ten : 8 December 1941-11 May 1942
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
As an amateur "student" of the history of WWII, this book provided me with a better understanding of the early Naval air campaign in the Pacific. Patrol Wing Ten's men and PBY Catalina planes were in the meat grinder from the very start of the war. Constantly under harrassment from the Japanese invasions, this unit performed admirably as they had to move their bases of operation frequently. The unit was split into many parts and worked from both land and sea facilities at the same time. Every air patrol almost guaranteed contact with superior enemy airplanes. Their ability to perform their role as both scout and rescuer leaves one in amazement considering the stress they were under physically, both sailors and planes.
Keeping a squadron in the air in the face of a superior enemy is tough under any circumstances. To be able to do it while working from the sea with virtually little or no plane maintainance was incredible.
Read this one with a map of the south Pacific handy as the scene of operations changes frequently throughout this book.

Click Here to see more reviews about: In the Hands of Fate: The Story of Patrol Wing Ten : 8 December 1941-11 May 1942



Buy Now

Click here for more information about In the Hands of Fate: The Story of Patrol Wing Ten : 8 December 1941-11 May 1942

Read More...

Guns of the American West Review

Guns of the American West
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I ordered this book expecting the ultimte story on the fascinating subject of Old West firearms. Indeed, the photographs of the guns discussed are absolutely stunning. No reader will be disappointed there. But just a quick scan at some of the photo captions revealed some frustrating annoyances: 1) in many multi-gun pictures, the exact location of each gun within the photo is not clearly called out in its caption; this is confusing, especially to those readers unfamiliar with the guns shown. It would have been much easier to find each pictured gun if the author had numbered each one, then included these numbers in his captions so the reader would know exactly where in the layout a particular gun is located. 2) Most of the gun photos include interesing period accouterments such as holsters, badges, documents, photos, etc. Sometimes the accompanying caption identifies these intriguing items, but at other times the caption ignores them. This, too, is frustrating, since in most cases these historic paraphernalia are as interesting as the pictured guns themselves. 3) A few captions contain factual errors. One, for example, states that a small medal shown with one pistol is the Medal of Honor, which it is not. In another, it is stated that Lt Col George A. Custer lost his entire regiment (the 7th Cavalry) at the Little Big Horn battle. In fact, only the five companies under Custer's immediate command were wiped out. Hundreds of troopers from the other companies survived the fight. Bottom line: from this first quick look at the book's photos and captions, I must reluctantly conclude that there are probably many more mistakes and frustrations in the captions that I didn't have time to find. As far as the main text of the book, I offer no opinion, since this initial scan encompassed only a brief look at the photos and their captions. All things considered, I would certainly recommend this book to anyone interested in viewing a treasure trove of beautiful photos of some of the most famous guns in American history. If only more time had been spent on making the captions as enjoyable as the pictures....

Click Here to see more reviews about: Guns of the American West

This is a sprawling history of a nation built on the sweat and ambition of inventors, adventurers, and people searching for a new beginning in the mid-19th century. As readers see America change over the decades, they witness the role of the gun in preserving life, defending families and upholding law and order at a time when nothing in life was simple. With the turn of the century we follow this tale of adventure and innovation into the early 1900s, and the end of a way of life, the end of the Wild West and the American Cowboy of a bygone era.

Buy NowGet 57% OFF

Click here for more information about Guns of the American West

Read More...

E-Mail to the Front: One Wife's Correspondence with Her Husband Overseas Review

E-Mail to the Front: One Wife's Correspondence with Her Husband Overseas
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Wow! Where to start? Before reading E-MAIL TO THE FRONT, I appreciated America's military families in a vague sort of way. Yes, I knew they worried about their loved ones who had been deployed thousands of miles away and that it must be difficult for them to cope with the absence of a missing husband or wife, but I had no real concept of the everyday sacrifices they make on our behalf. This book changed all that!
What is it like to have a toddler and a newborn, move two thousand miles away from your family and friends, and then wave good-bye to your husband for six months? How do you manage to get a job (as a trial lawyer, no less), deal with the usual array of childhood illnesses, feed the dog, mow the lawn, and manage the million and one details of family life while also trying to keep your marriage thriving by having phone sex on monitored lines from thousands of miles away? Read E-MAIL TO THE FRONT, and you'll find out how! Ms. Holliday gives us a look into the real challenges military families face--not the sometimes whitewashed, rah-rah version we see so often in the media. This sometimes funny, sometimes poignant account of how she survived her husband's two deployments will make you want to go up to the next military family you see and say "thank you." And I want to say "thank you" to the author for this wonderfully written, thoroughly entertaining book that opened my eyes to what it's like for the families left behind!

Click Here to see more reviews about: E-Mail to the Front: One Wife's Correspondence with Her Husband Overseas

"6/9: Evidently I wasn't supposed to put so much oil in the mower. The smoke went away fairly quickly, though. Connor even got to go for a ride in the fire truck."Alesia Holliday has survived scenes like this and more while her husband, a naval flight officer, has been away on military duty. They have forged a different kind of marriage-one that the 1.5 million current active-duty service members and their families will identify with. E-mail to the Front has a large built-in audience that boasts a camaraderie strengthened by shared difficulties and discoveries. E-mail to the Front consists of short commentaries by Alesia and an e-mail dialogue between her and her husband while he was on deployment. In text filled with empathy, gut-level honesty, humor, and unflinching support, chapters cover everything from "Departure: Only 183 Days to Go" to "Rebellion of the Appliances" to "It's Like Being a Single Mother, but I Can't Date." E-mail to the Front will appeal to everyone who appreciates the courage of those who choose to serve their country, the families who are meeting the challenge of military duty, and those who love and support them. Pulitzer Prize-winning humorist Dave Barry has written a cover quote for the book, and best-selling author Suzanne Brockmann said "This book should be required reading for all Americans."

Buy Now

Click here for more information about E-Mail to the Front: One Wife's Correspondence with Her Husband Overseas

Read More...

The Delta Solution Review

The Delta Solution
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
It seems as if the Somalian pirates are the 2011 evil-doers of choice. Almost simultaneously, Patrick Robinson and Wilbur Smith have hit us with similar tales of revenge against pirate deeds. Sadly, both books are far from their authors best efforts. Focusing on The Delta Solution, Patrick Robinson has provided us with a very uneven book. He spends 80% of the book working on multiple pirate attacks and some SEAL training stories. Then, almost as if an afterthought, he concludes with a fairly simplistic attack first on a seized ship and then on the pirate's headquarters. The attack is carried out with routine precision and without any excitement or threat of failure. Perhaps as more details of the SEAL attack on Osama bin Laden come out, we will find out the pitfalls of real attacks. Sadly, Robinson offers none in the Delta Solution.
Over the next few weeks I am sure that the hunger for tales of SEAL missions will drive some to The Delta Solution. Frankly, I would suggest you read some of Patrick Robinson's earlier works and avoid Delta.

Click Here to see more reviews about: The Delta Solution



Buy NowGet 35% OFF

Click here for more information about The Delta Solution

Read More...