Becoming a Leader the Annapolis Way Review

Becoming a Leader the Annapolis Way
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Excellent book. As a career Naval Officer, I have seen first hand how critical each of the leadership principles discussed in this book are. Throughout fleet, these are the skills, and values which distinguish the highly successful leaders from the mediocre. In a straightforward manner, the authors elucidate the 12 fundamental lessons which have been carefully honed over the course of the Naval Academy's long and impressive history of turning out admirable military, government and business leaders. When earnestly applied, these tenets will prove to be of significant value to leaders and organizations, whether military or civilian. In this highly enlightening book, Johnson and Harper blend sound psychological and sociological knowledge with gripping real life examples. In addition to being informative and thought provoking, the book is a fun read. I strongly recommend it.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Becoming a Leader the Annapolis Way



Buy NowGet 29% OFF

Click here for more information about Becoming a Leader the Annapolis Way

Read More...

Japan's Imperial Army: Its Rise and Fall, 1853-1945 (Modern War Studies Series) Review

Japan's Imperial Army: Its Rise and Fall, 1853-1945 (Modern War Studies Series)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
It has taken more than six decades after its fall, but at last we have a fine, well-written, well-informed English-language history of the army of imperial Japan. Given the central role that the Japanese Army played in the history of Japan and East Asia generally for half a century, it is remarkable that it has taken so long, but we can be thankful for the result.
The book is superbly balanced and remarkably inclusive. Military, political, social, and economic aspects -- they are all there. It is all somewhat more condensed than one might wish -- an editorial choice, no doubt, rather than any limitation of Drea's knowledge. But the bibliography and notes provide a comprehensive guide to sources both in Japanese and English.
This is a very accessible book. The author provides a framework of historical background that can guide readers not familiar with the details of Japan's history, but does so in a graceful fashion that will not get in the way of those who know Japan better. In particular, readers who simply want to understand the Asian part of World War II clearly should find it easy and fascinating reading.
There is absolutely no way to understand the history of modern Japan without understanding the Japanese Army, and no other book on the Japanese Army in English that can begin to compare with this one.
There is a book of more or less equivalent excellence about the Japanese Navy, Kaigun: Strategy, Tactics, and Technology in the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1887-1941. But the navy was never as central to Japanese strategy or politics as the army -- the army really drove the train and Drea tells us how. It is best to read this book first, and then go on to the navy.
With the Chinese sounding steadily more like Japan in the late 1920s, this book could scarcely be more timely.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Japan's Imperial Army: Its Rise and Fall, 1853-1945 (Modern War Studies Series)



Buy NowGet 42% OFF

Click here for more information about Japan's Imperial Army: Its Rise and Fall, 1853-1945 (Modern War Studies Series)

Read More...

Hunt and Kill: U-505 and the U-boat War in the Atlantic Review

Hunt and Kill: U-505 and the U-boat War in the Atlantic
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
There has been great interest in the Museum of Science and Industry's current restoration of U-505. With perfect timing, this newly released book will help fill a gap in people's knowledge of the U-boat war in general, and U-505's remarkable history in particular.

Most people know U-505 was captured intact, and eventually became the chief exhibit at the MSI in Chicago. The fact that it was the first warship captured by the US Navy since the War of 1812, and the only warship captured during WWII, makes U-505 of great historic value. Stopping there, however, would sell the story short. Before and after its capture, the boat enjoyed an extremely interesting career. Most U-boats ended their war as final resting places for their crews or, if they were lucky, survived the war without any successes to speak of. Neither was true for U-505.

Hunt and Kill: U-505 and the U-boat War in the Atlantic, edited by Theodore P. Savas, is not just another "How U-505 was captured" story. Instead, it is a collection of chapters by some of the best U-boat historians writing today. Gathering them all together to write on this subject was a risky proposition, for many similar compendiums produce a disjointed and unfocused book of uneven quality. Theodore Savas, as an experienced editor and writer, has avoided these pitfalls by gathering the finest talent available and getting the best possible from each contributor. The various chapters fit seamlessly together and add substantially to the final product.

The greatest U-boat man alive today, Erich Topp (U-552), opens the book with a Foreword that is typically reflective of what the subject means for mankind. The other contributors are mostly well known to aficionados of U-boat books. Timothy Mulligan and Eric Rust in particular make welcome and long overdue returns (with Rust contributing a moving Introduction). Other familiar names are Lawrence Paterson, Jak Mallmann Showell and Jordan Vause. These veteran writers are joined by Mark Wise, a naval intelligence officer, and Keith Gill, U-505's curator in Chicago at the MSI.

The story of U-505 is shaped by two complex components: the type of U-boat it was, and the men that gave it life. The Type IX was a weapons system and thus the limitations and strengths of this system's design imparted a template for the successes and failures experienced by its crew. With great clarity and insight, Eric Rust writes of the corresponding strategic successes and failures of the larger picture of Type IX deployments in "No Target too Far: The Genesis, Concept, and Operations of Type IX U-boats in World War II."

While in some part mirroring the whole U-boat war, Type IXs in many respects enjoyed a separate experience apart from the war fought by the Type VIIs. Rust presents compelling arguments for what made Type IX operations unique in their repeated successes as the long reaching arm of the Kriegsmarine. Often misunderstood and underrated, the Type IX was a design that repaid astute deployment, even rating statistically better in some ways than the more famous Type VII. Well read U-boat fans and newcomers alike will find much of interest here, as Rust paves the way for the balance of the chapters that follow.

Like all warships, the organic component making up each individual u-boat was critical to its success. The close working relationships aboard these boats form a large part of the 'mystique' that intrigues so many of us. Timothy Mulligan shows why U-505 personified Karl Döntz's famous statement that a U-boat crew was a "community bound by fate." In a chapter of the same name, and in his customarily meticulous but easy style, Mulligan covers in depth the men who made up U-505's crew, their positions, and their changing makeup due to crew turnover during the boat's career. He cuts through the numbers and details to paint a clear picture of what was really going on in U-505 and the larger U-bootwaffe at different times as fortunes waxed and waned.

For readers who enjoyed Mulligan's masterful examination of the men of the U-bootwaffe in his book Neither Sharks Nor Wolves, this is a welcome repeat demonstration of his talent for seeing through numbers, names and dates and finding an underlying trend, a human side to the procession of more than 100 different men who served aboard U-505. Where Mulligan's book turns a scholar's eye to the whole community of submariners, this chapter focuses on the story of a single boat. As he concludes, the background and character of the men who crewed U-boats are not easily defined, and thus defy stereotyping.

Mulligan offers relevant insights into the background and personal stories of many who served on U-505. One hundred and fifteen officers and men were assigned to U-505. Unfortunately, there was not room to give them all mention, but the examples we see are representative in their variety. This section is a pivotal element to the book, for the events that follow are indeed those of a shared community, who like any other combat unit, had its fair share of ordinary men, enigmatic men, men who rose to the occasion, men who did their best, and some men who failed when put to the test. Mulligan also disproves the notion that U-505 was an unlucky boat, for most of the men who served on U-505 survived the war. For a service that suffered losses like no other before or since, that alone is a noteworthy observation.

Lawrence Paterson offers the next chapter, telling the story of U-505 from an operational point of view. "From Lion's Roar to Blunted Axe: The Combat Patrols of U-505" carries the readers along as the boat is launched, commissioned, worked up, and sent to the front to hunt allied shipping. Few people realize U-505 made several successful patrols before her last effort off the west coast of Africa. This is Paterson's expertise: bringing to life operational histories. Those who have read his First U-Boat Flotilla and Second U-boat Flotilla books will know what to expect: detailed, accurate narrative woven around anecdotes, facts, and official records from primary sources. Paterson is a prolific writer with three published books and a fourth on the way.

Paterson fans get a bonus chapter later in the book called "Collision Course: Task Group 22.3 and the Hunt for U-505," which tells about the final fateful encounter between the Allied hunters and the Axis U-boat. Savas made a good choice here, as Paterson always breathes life into operational details and "tells history" with ease.

Many readers are familiar with Ultra and the project to break the ciphers used by BdU to communicate with and control U-boat operations. Mark Wise and Jak Showell shed light on the lesser known story of the American side of the intelligence war. Wise is a signals intelligence specialist and much of what is offered in their joint chapter entitled "Deciphering the U-boat War: The Role of Intelligence in the Capture of U-505" was new to me.

Another overdue return to U-boat writing is Jordan Vause's contribution, a much needed analysis of the moments leading up to the capture of U-505 from the perspective of the Germans. "Desperate Decisions: The German Loss of U-505" offers an in depth examination of not just what happened at the time of the boat's capture, but why it happened. Vause shows us that actions and decisions have consequences, and some decisions lead irrevocably down a path that can't be altered. It is written in the typical Vause style.

The story of U-505 does not end with the boat's capture. I admit that initially I was a little dubious about the final section, but soon realized how wrong I was. Keith Gill, the boat's curator, tells a fascinating story of how U-505 escaped scrapping to become the MSI's star exhibit in "Project 356: U-505 and the Journey to Chicago." It was not, as many think, just simple matter of towing U-505 to Chicago and putting her on exhibit. Getting the boat there was nearly impossible, and Gill offers a gripping account of the constant on-the-edge failure, politics, bickering, money, egos, legal hassles, and behind-the-scenes maneuvering. Now you can find out the whole story. Gill makes it clear that we really are lucky the boat survived all the bureaucratic bungling to be preserved as a memorial for us all to see and ponder. Gill also casts aside the "unlucky boat" label often attached to U-505. After reading Hunt and Kill you will agree with him.

There are 3 maps of U-505's operational patrols and over 60 photos in Hunt and Kill. Comprehensive explanatory (and very interesting) notes and informative appendixes round off this well executed book. The writers are all perfectly suited for their topics, the subject is deeply interesting, and with current restoration and re-housing of U-505, the timing is perfect. Savas has once more assembled a star team of writers and together they have produced a winner. He also makes it clear that the book could not have been accomplished without their expertise.

If you are interested in U-boats or Naval History, Hunt and Kill: U-505 and the U-boat War in the Atlantic is a must have.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Hunt and Kill: U-505 and the U-boat War in the Atlantic



Buy NowGet 34% OFF

Click here for more information about Hunt and Kill: U-505 and the U-boat War in the Atlantic

Read More...

For Love of Country: Confronting Rape and Sexual Harassment in the U.S. Military Review

For Love of Country: Confronting Rape and Sexual Harassment in the U.S. Military
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
It is right for men and women to want to serve their country.
It is right for men and women to volunteer to train and support the interests of their leaders.
It is right for subordinates to respectfully obey their commanders.
It is logical to assume that I need only fear the external enemy. Yet, in this respect Ms. Nelson tells the truth.
By outlining military standards of conduct and defining the perception that the enemy lies outside of the American chain of command, Ms. Nelson honestly describes the situation of patiotic soldiers who believe they are safe in a very imperfect system.
In the context of presenting truth about the frequency of abuse, culture of the military that perpetuates the abuse, and the consequences of abuse to individuals and to units, Ms. Nelson offers logical solutions to a historical problem.
Ms. Nelson's book is worded in such a way as to offer hope to mature leadership in their ability to address these issues. The book honors soliers who committed their lives and security to the Armed Services only to be betrayed by a comrad and dismissed by their division. Ms. Nelson obviously cares about her country and cares about service men and women.
I would recommend this book as standard training for all officer candidates. This book is so well written and true that it would behoove us to dissolve all current sexual harrassement/abuse training and instead assign this book correspondence to each Commander thus establishing a new individual standard outside of the communal culture. The standard needs to raised. Ms. Nelson, with candor and grace, says how high.

Click Here to see more reviews about: For Love of Country: Confronting Rape and Sexual Harassment in the U.S. Military

A compelling exploration of sexual victimization in the United States military!This incisive book offers a unique perspective on rape and sexual harassment in the United States military. Drawn from the experiences of military personnel and presented in their own words, For Love of Country: Confronting Rape and Sexual Harassment in the U.S. Military takes an honest and heartfelt look at a pervasive problem. Service veterans speak candidly about a breakdown of values and leadership failure which has perpetrated a culture of abuse. Male and female rape victims reflect on their efforts to serve their country with honor. Author Terri Spahr Nelson, a decorated United States Army veteran and psychotherapist specializing in sexual trauma recovery, has mixed a compelling chorus of hundreds of personal accounts into a single voice calling for reform. She presents emotional retellings from victims of rape and sexual harassment, with responses from military and congressional leaders. Ms. Nelson offers statistics released from the Pentagon about sexual assault reports, convictions, and the General Accounting Office, and current field research.For Love of Country: Confronting Rape and Sexual Harassment in the U.S. Military presents:
personal accounts from survivors
unique, inside perspectives from military personnel and veterans
commentary from military and congressional leaders
Pentagon statistics on sexual assault with conviction and sentencing rates
findings and recommendations from the Department of Defense
clinical information on issues facing military trauma survivors
For Love of Country: Confronting Rape and Sexual Harassment in the U.S. Military serves as a one-of-a-kind resource for professionals, an educational must for military personnel, and a compelling eye-opener to anyone concerned with the preservation of integrity and honor in the United States armed services.

Buy Now

Click here for more information about For Love of Country: Confronting Rape and Sexual Harassment in the U.S. Military

Read More...

An Affair of Honor (Honor Series) (The Honor Series) Review

An Affair of Honor (Honor Series) (The Honor Series)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
An excellent book in an excellent series. The purchase process, timely delivery, and condition of the book was also rather ironically an affair of honor. Very Pleased!

Click Here to see more reviews about: An Affair of Honor (Honor Series) (The Honor Series)

At the beginning of this fifth novel in Robert N. Macomber's award-winning Honor Series, it's December 1873 and Lieutenant Peter Wake is the executive officer of the USS Omaha on dreary patrol in the West Indies. Lonely for his family, he is looking forward to returning home to Pensacola in a few months and rekindling his troubled marriage with Linda.But fate has other plans for Wake. He runs afoul of the Royal Navy in Antigua and a beautiful French woman enters his life in Martinique. Then he's suddenly sent off on staff assignment to Europe, where he is soon immersed in the cynical swirl of Old World politics. Wake finds himself running for his life after getting embroiled in a Spanish civil war. Then he gets caught up in diplomatic intrigue among the French, Germans, and British. But his real test comes when he and his old friend Sean Rork are sent on a no-win mission in northern Africa. Not the least of his troubles is Madame Catherine Faber de Champlain, wife of a French diplomat. Her many charms involve Peter Wake in an affair of honor.

Buy NowGet 22% OFF

Click here for more information about An Affair of Honor (Honor Series) (The Honor Series)

Read More...

Silent Steel: The Mysterious Death of the Nuclear Attack Sub USS Scorpion Review

Silent Steel: The Mysterious Death of the Nuclear Attack Sub USS Scorpion
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
USS Scorpion's sinking remains a controversial topic more than 35 years later. But the focus has always been on the ship and not on the crew, all of whom perished aboard the submarine.
Stephen Johnson deftly weaves the personal stories of crew members with that of the ship itself. Scorpion was a cranky, failure-prone submarine and her crew had to work doubly hard to keep her in service. The never-ending failures and breakdowns caused at least one crew member to transfer off the ship, though his guilt haunted him for the rest of his life.
Along the way we see that the Navy hadn't learned its lesson from the sinking of the Thresher just five years earlier. Though Scorpion had been back-fitted with several "SUBSAFE" modifications, her emergency-blow system remained inoperable due to design defects for the rest of her brief life. The Navy seemed more interested in holding repair costs down, rather than the safety of a nuclear warship and her crew.
Johnson's style is subtle and understated, and is thus more effective at conveying the human tragedy of the sinking than the semi-hype of Sherry Sontag/Christopher Drew ("Blind Man's Buff") or John Craven ("The Silent War").
Those looking for a definitive explaination of the sinking may be disappointed -- as with many technical failures, there are far more questions than answers.
Intriguing, sobering, ultimately very sad, and very worthy. A tribute to those who died beneath the restless sea. Highly recommended.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Silent Steel: The Mysterious Death of the Nuclear Attack Sub USS Scorpion



Buy NowGet 27% OFF

Click here for more information about Silent Steel: The Mysterious Death of the Nuclear Attack Sub USS Scorpion

Read More...

War Shots: Norm Hatch and the U.S. Marine Corps Combat Cameramen of World War II Review

War Shots: Norm Hatch and the U.S. Marine Corps Combat Cameramen of World War II
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I have known of the great work of Norm Hatch for many years. He was the right man in the right place at the right time...and he still is. I worked most of my USMC career with writers/photographers and eventually for a "Mr" Norm Hatch (Major, USMCR, Retired) in DoD audio-visual news for about 18 months before retiring for civilian life. I especially admire the way Jones and he handle the great responsibilities explained in the book: with humility despite tremendous responsibility by a then-young, relatively inexperienced sergeant in his first combat. Strongly recommend this great book to everyone who appreciates American History.

Click Here to see more reviews about: War Shots: Norm Hatch and the U.S. Marine Corps Combat Cameramen of World War II

* Story of how military photographers got their shots while storming beaches and assaulting pillboxes with combat troops * Hatch filmed With the Marines at Tarawa, which won the 1944 Academy Award for Best Documentary Short Subject * New details on the controversy surrounding the famous photo of the flag raising on Iwo Jima * Hatch was Person of the Week on ABC World News with Diane Sawyer in March 2010 * For fans of Flags of Our Fathers, Letters from Iwo Jima, and HBO's The Pacific

Buy NowGet 29% OFF

Click here for more information about War Shots: Norm Hatch and the U.S. Marine Corps Combat Cameramen of World War II

Read More...

Blue Devil Island (Five Star Science Fiction and Fantasy Series) Review

Blue Devil Island (Five Star Science Fiction and Fantasy Series)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I love reading about the WWII era and fighter planes, I also love Sci-Fi, and this book delivers both in healthy doses.
Mr. Rainey conveys his deep passion for fighter combat in a way that draws you into the lives of the pilots and makes you feel as if you are there with them on the island, and on patrol with them in the air.
I highly recommend this book to anyone that likes Sci-Fi and/or the WWII era, it is absolutely engrossing and enjoyable. A fantastic read.


Click Here to see more reviews about: Blue Devil Island (Five Star Science Fiction and Fantasy Series)

Autumn 1943, the beginning of the American offensive against the Japanese in the South Pacific. Just west of the Solomon Islands lies a remote desert island called Conquest, where the U.S. Navy stations a new fighting squadron, led by Lieutenant Commander Drew McLachlan, an ace pilot and veteran of the Battle of the Coral Sea. The Blue Devils soar into combat--against known and unknown enemies. The squadron's island home may not be secure--in nearby volcanic caves, McLachlan finds evidence of habitation by unknown natives--natives that resemble no living race, that may yet exist in the mysterious subterranean catacombs. As the Solomon campaign enters into its final skirmishes, the Japanese at last turn their attention to Conquest Island. Now the Blue Devils find themselves the target of an overwhelming assault by the desperate Imperial Japanese forces--and an unknown predatory force that leaves mutilated victims as the only evidence of its presence.--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Buy Now

Click here for more information about Blue Devil Island (Five Star Science Fiction and Fantasy Series)

Read More...

Fighter Aircraft (Combat Development in World War II) Review

Fighter Aircraft (Combat Development in World War II)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This is a great book for those interested in WW2 fighter development. Although not large or exhaustive in detail it contains many nuggets of information that are hard to find elsewhere. Highly recommended.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Fighter Aircraft (Combat Development in World War II)



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Fighter Aircraft (Combat Development in World War II)

Read More...

Eight Survived: The Harrowing Story of the USS Flier and the Only Downed World War II Submariners to Survive and Evade Capture Review

Eight Survived: The Harrowing Story of the USS Flier and the Only Downed World War II Submariners to Survive and Evade Capture
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Eight survived is another title to make Admiral O'Kane's 'Clear the Bridge' soar. This one is barely readable and is barely a one star book. The author is not familiar with nautical terminology. The skipper of the sub is ordered to "anchor at a dock", is standing on the "floor" of the conning tower, and the crew's compartment has a steel "floor". Campbell opens the book with an involved description of the Flier going aground at Midway. The chapter screams for a chart of the Midway atoll to put some coherence in the chapter and it isn't there. All we know is that the channel is narrow and difficult and the Flier skipper, who supposedly has fourteen years' experience at sea, totally bungled the approach. The sub runs aground and in attempting to set the anchor in a heavy sea, a seaman is lost overboard and drowned and several others come close to drowning.
To pad the word count Campbell digresses with character vignettes that just don't fit into the narrative which is shaky enough. We have no interest in the men mainly because the war patrol events aren't clearly defined and the result is both stories lack involvement and coherence. My thought is that Mr. Campbell doesn't want to clutter the book with a lot of submarine lingo which is a criticism of O'Kane's book. Clear the Bridge has a compelling story that moves and is involving and we are quite willing to work with O'Kane when he discusses, clappers and angles on the bow, etc. This story dumbs down the action to generalities that insult the intelligence of the reader with a minimal knowledge of submarine warfare.
The writing style is plodding and formulaic. Two or three subject-verb-object declarative sentences in a row. Then a compound sentence with a subordinate clause. This would be good high school level non-fiction writing since the author did the research. He doesn't cite O'Kane's Clear the Bridge in his bibliography and he should read it. The gaps in Eight Survived may become more visible to him and his next effort may benefit. This book will remainder very soon and be available at a very low price right after Christmas.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Eight Survived: The Harrowing Story of the USS Flier and the Only Downed World War II Submariners to Survive and Evade Capture

The incredible wartime saga of the only American submarinersto survive the sinking of their ship and evade enemy capture in WWII On the night of August 13, 1944, the U.S. submarine Flier struck a mine in the Sulu Sea in the southern Philippines as it steamed along the surface. All but fifteen of the more than eighty-strong crew went down with the vessel. Of those left floating in the dark, eight survived by swimming for seventeen hours before washing ashore on an uninhabited island. The story of the Flier and its eight survivors is wholly unique in the annals of U.S. military history. Eight Survived tells the gripping story of the doomed submarine and its crew from its first patrol, during which it sank several enemy ships, to the explosion in the Sulu Sea. Drawing on interviews with the survivors and on a visit to the jungle where they washed ashore-where a cast of fascinating characters helped the U.S. sailors evade the Japanese-Douglas Campbell fully captures the combination of extraordinary courage and luck that marked one of the most heroic episodes of World War II.


Buy NowGet 27% OFF

Click here for more information about Eight Survived: The Harrowing Story of the USS Flier and the Only Downed World War II Submariners to Survive and Evade Capture

Read More...

Admiral William A. Moffett: Architect of Naval Aviation (Smithsonian History of Aviation and Spaceflight Series) Review

Admiral William A. Moffett: Architect of Naval Aviation (Smithsonian History of Aviation and Spaceflight Series)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
William F. Trimble's Smithsonian History of Aviation Series biography "Admiral William A. Moffett: Architect of Naval Aviation" is an outstanding work about the father of American Naval Aviation.
Trimble paints a clear picture of Moffett as a dynamic man of distinct vision, great patience, and remarkable talent who clearly discerned the basic philosophical and organizational ideas necessary to make aviation a part of the fleet. He may have been less clear on some details of the technology, but his broad-ranging vision of the future impact of aviation on navies was completely correct.
Trimble treats the dispute between Billy Mitchell and William Moffett as diplomatically as Moffett did, but no less finally. Nor does Trimble shirk from cataloging Moffett's numerous political battles within and without the Navy to establish Naval Aviation. He also clearly details the admiral's dealings with the many and sundry personalities that impacted his quest to establish aviation in the Navy.
One remarkable fact that comes out is that Moffett was a battleship captain before he became a champion of aviation. Also conspicuously absent in this work is any real finger-pointing at a supposed cabal of "battleship admirals" reputed by legend to have stymied the growth of Naval Aviation. Instead one finds a trail of Congressional penury, and bureaucratic in-fighting, almost none of which spoke to or even disputed the military value of Naval Aviation, much less cast it in opposition to the battleship.
What Trimble brings out is that the early "opposition" to Naval Aviation had almost everything to do with a bureaucratic "turf war" between Moffett's new Bureau of Aviation and the Bureau of Navigation (later called the Bureau of Personnel). The other--"material"--Bureaus bowed out with relative good grace once the technical necessity of BuAer became clear and they grudgingly surrendered control of their shares of the budgetary pie and personnel necessary to develop aviation as a weapon for the fleet. However, BuNav launched a bitter campaign to retain its prerogatives respecting its ability to control personnel assignments and pay.
That battle was still underway when Moffett was killed in the crash of the airship USS Akron, and it was left up to others such as Ernest King and John Towers to continue the fight.
That Moffett was lost in an airship accident is viewed by many as poetic, given his championing of the technology of rigid airships. Ironically, Moffett was not so uniquely or rosily linked to this nascent aviation technology as legend would have it. He pressed every aspect of aviation technology in the Navy, including float planes, sea planes, catapults, and carrier aircraft as well as rigid and non-rigid airships. At the time of his loss aboard Akron, Moffett had been entertaining serious doubts about the effectiveness of airships and pressing the Akron's commanders hard to demonstrate the worth of such expensive vehicles. Clearly, Moffett's support of airships was neither unthinking nor unwavering. His devotion to evaluating any promising technology was, however, total, so he wasn't going to axe rigid airships without good cause.
Beyond his foresight of what aviation could bring to the Navy, and his superb political and organizational skills, Moffett was most importantly a leader. His ability to quiet radical air power advocates in the Navy's own ranks and persuade non-aviators in the fleet of aviation's future importance were instrumental in winning the battle against Billy Mitchell's idea of a unified Air Force controlling all military aircraft ashore and at sea. Had Navy non-aviators been unconvinced of aviation's future utility, they might happily have given up such an expensive burden; had Congress perceived great dissention and support of a unified Air Force in Naval Aviation ranks, it might have mandated Mitchell's approach.
The true measure of Moffett's skill with people was the adroit high-wire act he managed, suspended between traditional naval officers who abhored political activity by officers on one side and the highly charged Mitchell-led air power lobbyists on the other. Despite muttering and outrage on his obviously political activity from within the Navy, and often intemperate attacks by the air power lobby from without, Moffett befriended, wrote to and influenced numerous politicians, industrialists and socialites. On many occasions the intervention of Moffett's bevy of friends proved crucial in the political battles raging around Naval Aviation.
The man who became this leader is also revealed by Trimble's writing, but what becomes apparent is that first, foremost and always, William Moffett was a naval officer. That was the consuming task of his life, and when he discovered aviation it too became central to who he was and what he did.
It is abundantly clear from Trimble's writing the magnitude of the loss the Navy and the nation suffered 20 minutes into 4 April 1933.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Admiral William A. Moffett: Architect of Naval Aviation (Smithsonian History of Aviation and Spaceflight Series)



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Admiral William A. Moffett: Architect of Naval Aviation (Smithsonian History of Aviation and Spaceflight Series)

Read More...

H. M. S. Surprise (Vol. Book 3) (Aubrey/Maturin Novels) Review

H. M. S. Surprise (Vol. Book 3)  (Aubrey/Maturin Novels)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
In praising Patrick O'Brian's Aubrey-Maturin books I am on well-trodden ground. In a sense, it is superfluous to do so: so many people, of such varied and excellent taste, have praised these books to the skies that further lauds from the modest likes of me are hardly necessary. Still, I'm glad to add my words. These stories concern Jack Aubrey, a ship captain in the English Navy at the time of the Napoleonic Wars, and his great friend Stephen Maturin, an Irish-Catalan doctor and spy who in the first book joins Jack's crew as ship doctor.
As H. M. S. Surpries opens, political machinations cost Jack his prize money (earned in the previous book0, and Stephen's cover in Spain is blown. As a result, and also because Stephen is scheming to see his lover Diana again (who has been taken by her keeper Richard Canning to India), Jack takes command of the aged frigate H.M.S. Surprise, and is sent to Cambodia (stopping in India) to deliver the new British envoy to the Sultan of Kampong.
Thus the setup for a long, wonderful, account of the voyage to the Orient and back. The pleasures of this book are remarkably varied: high comedy, such as the famous drunken sloth incident; high adventure, as the men of the Surprise battle not only the South Atlantic at its fiercest, but also the French; and bitter disappointment and even tragedy, in Stephen's seesaw relationship with Diana, as well as Stephen's involvement with a young Indian girl.
The pleasures of this book, however, are not restricted to a fine plot. The ongoing development of the characters of Jack and Stephen, and of their complex and fully described friendship, is a major achievement. In addition, the many minor characters are fascinating: the envoy Mr. Stanhope, Stephen's Indian friend, the various ship's officers and men, other ship captains, and so on. And O'Brian's depiction of the building of an effective crew, the relationship of captain to officers to men, is another fascinating detail, and something he revisits from book to book, as Jack encounters different crews in different circumstances. Finally, O'Brian is a fine writer of prose, with a faintly old-fashioned style, well poised to evoke the atmosphere of the time of which he writes to readers of our time, and consistently quotable, in his dry fashion.
Jack and Stephen are heroic in certain aspects of their characters, but they are both multi-faceted characters, with terrible flaws and endearing crotchets in addition to their accomplishments. And they truly come across to this reader as characters of their time, and not 20th Century people cast back into the past. Even Stephen's very contemporary racial and religious attitudes are well-motivated by his background, and expressed in language which reeks wonderfully of his time: "Stuff. I have the greatest esteem for Jews, if anyone can speak of a heterogeneous great body of men in such a meaningless, illiberal way."
I recommend all these books highly. It was with great difficulty the first time through the series that I restrained myself, upon finishing each book, from immediately starting in on the next one.

Click Here to see more reviews about: H. M. S. Surprise (Vol. Book 3) (Aubrey/Maturin Novels)



Buy NowGet 32% OFF

Click here for more information about H. M. S. Surprise (Vol. Book 3) (Aubrey/Maturin Novels)

Read More...

The Line of Fire: From Washington to the Gulf, the Politics and Battles of the New Military Review

The Line of Fire: From Washington to the Gulf, the Politics and Battles of the New Military
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
William J. Crowe, Jr. was a U.S. Navy submariner who rose to the rank of four-star admiral and served as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the highest position in the U.S. military. With coauthor David Chanoff, Crowe tells his story in the memoir "The Line of Fire: From Washington to the Gulf, the Politics and Battles of the New Military." The book begins with his 1989 visit to the Soviet cruiser _Kirov_, then moves back in time to retrace his entire career. Crowe recounts his education at Annapolis, his service on diesel submarines, his command of the U.S.S. _Trout_, his PhD studies at Princeton, his service in Vietnam as a senior adviser to the Vietnamese riverine force, his tours of duty as NATO Commander-in-Chief for Southern Europe and as Pacific Forces Commander-in-Chief, and his chairmanship with the Joint Chiefs.
As he reviews his long career, Crowe also illuminates the many historic developments to which he was connected: North Korea's capture of the U.S. ship _Pueblo_, the _Achille Lauro_ hijacking, the Reagan-era military conflict with Libyan ruler Muammar Qaddafi, the background and passage of the Goldwater-Nichols Defense Reorganization Act, the conflict over the Strategic Defense Initiative, and more. I was especially interested by his substantial coverage of Operation Earnest Will, the mission to protect Kuwaiti shipping from attacks during the Iran-Iraq War. Also gripping is his account of a high intensity Pentagon war game known as Scylla II.
Crowe offers vivid portraits of the many interesting individuals he encountered over the course of his career: Admiral Hyman Rickover, Caspar Weinberger, Dick Cheney, Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos, and more. But the most extraordinary portrait in the book is that of Marshal Sergei Akhromeyev, Chief of Staff of the Soviet Union's armed forces. Crowe tells the ironic story of a professional relationship that grew into a friendship that crossed Cold War lines.
Crowe gives readers glimpses into the highest levels of the administrations of Reagan and the first Bush, and in an epilogue he discusses his retirement from military service and his involvement in the 1992 presidential campaign. Crowe's career spanned the Cold War era--he was a participant in and witness to some of the most important developments in 20th century military history. He tells his story in a straightforward, engaging voice. His ideas and experiences are both interesting and, in my opinion, still relevant for our post-9/11 world. Although I especially recommend this book to military professionals, I believe it would be valuable for any person with an interest in 20th century U.S. history. Recommended companion text: "America's Splendid Little Wars: A Short History of U.S. Engagements from the Fall of Saigon to Baghdad," by Peter Huchthausen.

Click Here to see more reviews about: The Line of Fire: From Washington to the Gulf, the Politics and Battles of the New Military



Buy Now

Click here for more information about The Line of Fire: From Washington to the Gulf, the Politics and Battles of the New Military

Read More...

All the Factors of Victory: Admiral Joseph Mason Reeves and the Origins of Carrier Airpower Review

All the Factors of Victory: Admiral Joseph Mason Reeves and the Origins of Carrier Airpower
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Thomas Wildenberg has done an invaluable service to U.S. naval history, and to the memory of an astonishing admiral by reconstructing the life and contributions of Admiral Joseph Mason Reeves.
Reeves story is one of those true stories that is in many ways stranger than fiction. Seemingly at every significant point and involved with every significant development in the U.S. Navy (with a few notable exceptions) from the Spanish-American War to the verge of World War II, Admiral Reeves' contributions have shocking breadth.
Reeves deserves much of the credit for the USS Oregon's remarkable machinery performance in rounding South America, and then in chasing down Cervera's cruisers in battle. His talent for mechanical engineering contributed to the revolution in American fire control after that war. He served as fleet ordnance officer twice, in a comparatively junior rank. He became a torpedo expert. He helped automate much of the back-breaking process of coaling. He commissioned the turbo-electric testbed collier Jupiter (a ship he would be associated with again under stranger circumstances). He commanded no less than three battleships (venerable Oregon, the second USS Maine, and dreadnought North Dakota) then went on to be the naval attache in Rome. Later he attended the Naval War College, where he proved a deadly tactician on the game floor.
All of this would have made a full career and marked him for flag rank, but then Reeves did yet another remarkable thing: he volunteered for aviation duty. Taking control of the aviation squadrons of the fleet and the first U.S. carrier, the Langley (the collier Jupiter, after conversion), Reeves relentlessly expanded the envelope of what the ship, the planes, and the pilots were able to do. Remarkably, this was often over the protests of the supposedly forward-thinking original aviators. Reeves then served as the aviation expert on the delegation to the abortive 1927 Naval Arms Limitation talks in Geneva. Placed in charge of carrier aviation again as the big carriers Lexington and Saratoga entered the fleet, Reeves pioneered the operations of independent carrier task forces and launched a stunning raid on the Panama Canal that presaged later uses of carrier air power. Another author once noted that no other man contributed so much to the development of carrier air power in the Navy as Reeves, and Wildenberg proves that statement correct. Reeves formulated and provoked his men to answer the "Thousand and One Questions" necessary to achieve the feat.
For many officers, those achievements alone would have made a career, and Reeves seemed headed for twilight on the General Board, where he again made valuable contributions before being tapped as the commander of the Battle Force, the Navy's prestigious core of battleships, and subsequently the highest operational command: Commander-In-Chief of the U.S. Fleet. In these roles his watchword was readiness, specifically for war, and he greatly advanced Navy preparedness, trimmed excess paperwork and implemented realistic exercises. He also exposed the unrealistic strategy for moving directly to the Philippines as logistically impossible, while simultaneously doing much to advance mobilization and logistics planning for war. He retired with the utmost prestige and the admiration of all but a tiny clique of jealous fellow admirals after 46 years, only to be called out of retirement by Roosevelt to run Lend-Lease, and serve on the Roberts Commission investigating Pearl Harbor.
Reeves' only recorded failure appears to be his marriage, but little is known of this sad story due to the lack of letters to illustrate it. He did, however, have two fine sons, one of whom sadly died as an Army aviator in a crash.
Much credit is due the author for pulling so much from truly minimal sources. Regretably, Admiral Reeves was not much given to writing and instead a great speaker, as Wildenberg shows. Reeves reticence with the written word sadly leaves tantalizing gaps in the record. Wildenberg perceptively, intelligently and cautiously speculates where appropriate, while clearly informing the reader that he is doing so.
A resounding "well done" to the author for informing me of a man who has now joined my pantheon of naval heroes.

Click Here to see more reviews about: All the Factors of Victory: Admiral Joseph Mason Reeves and the Origins of Carrier Airpower

Spans naval developments from the Spanish-American War through World War IIAddresses the development of carrier tactics in the U.S. Navy between the world warsAdm. Joseph Mason Reeves (1872–1948) took command of the U.S. Navy's nascent carrier arm during a critical period, transforming it from a small auxiliary command in support of the battle line into a powerful strike force. Until the carrier commanders of World War II proved their mettle, Reeves's expertise in the use of the aircraft carrier in naval tactics was unequalled. All the Factors of Victory is the first full-length biography of this eminent naval officer.

Buy Now

Click here for more information about All the Factors of Victory: Admiral Joseph Mason Reeves and the Origins of Carrier Airpower

Read More...

Guantánamo: A Working-Class History between Empire and Revolution (American Crossroads) Review

Guantánamo: A Working-Class History between Empire and Revolution (American Crossroads)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
History told from the bottom up almost always forces the reader to think about human injustice. This is certainly true of Jana Lipman's compellingly written, well researched study of those who built and worked at the Guantánamo naval base prior to the success of the Cuban Revolution in 1959. Lipman did field research in Guantánamo City and her distillation of the interviews she conducted makes an important contribution to the history of this unique U.S. military installation. As Lipman persuasively argues, Cuban workers had to navigate between being loyal Cuban citizens and trustworthy employees of the U.S. Navy. What is most fascinating to me is Lipman's information concerning those Cuban laborers who were also working to ensure the success of the Cuban Revolution. But what of those workers who liked working for the U.S. government, appreciated the benefits they received, and continued to live in Cuba and commuted to the base long after the Revolution had succeeded? This is an vital part of the history that is missing from Lipman's account.
Stephen Irving Max Schwab, author of Guantánamo, USA: The Untold History of America's Cuban Outpost

Click Here to see more reviews about: Guantánamo: A Working-Class History between Empire and Revolution (American Crossroads)

Guantánamo has become a symbol of what has gone wrong in the War on Terror. Yet Guantánamo is more than a U.S. naval base and prison in Cuba, it is a town, and our military occupation there has required more than soldiers and sailors--it has required workers. This revealing history of the women and men who worked on the U.S. naval base in Guantánamo Bay tells the story of U.S.-Cuban relations from a new perspective, and at the same time, shows how neocolonialism, empire, and revolution transformed the lives of everyday people. Drawing from rich oral histories and little-explored Cuban archives, Jana K. Lipman analyzes how the Cold War and the Cuban revolution made the naval base a place devoid of law and accountability. The result is a narrative filled with danger, intrigue, and exploitation throughout the twentieth century. Opening a new window onto the history of U.S. imperialism in the Caribbean and labor history in the region, her book tells how events in Guantánamo and the base created an ominous precedent likely to inform the functioning of U.S. military bases around the world.

Buy Now

Click here for more information about Guantánamo: A Working-Class History between Empire and Revolution (American Crossroads)

Read More...

Fatal North : Adventure and Survival Aboard USS Polaris, The First U.S. Expedition to the North Pole Review

Fatal North : Adventure and Survival Aboard USS Polaris, The First U.S. Expedition to the North Pole
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
In "Fatal North", Bruce Henderson's meticulous and thorough research takes an ill-fated polar expedition and makes it read like a who-dunnit. This is one of those books that takes the utmost of the reader's will power not to turn to the epilogue section at the end to see how it comes out.
Henderson's vivid description of the minutest details transports the reader to an ice floe in the Arctic and causes the reader to personally experience every physical, emotional and mental - the hopes, expectations, frustrations and relative successes - of the castaways. The contrast between courage and cowardice; competence and incompetence; loyalty and betrayal coupled with possible murder are the elements that make this book hard to put down once you start reading.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Fatal North : Adventure and Survival Aboard USS Polaris, The First U.S. Expedition to the North Pole



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Fatal North : Adventure and Survival Aboard USS Polaris, The First U.S. Expedition to the North Pole

Read More...

A Different Kind of Honor (The Honor Series) Review

A Different Kind of Honor (The Honor Series)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
The last half of the 19th century seemed to me to be a very weak period for a history of the US Navy. Leave out John Paul Jones, the Barbary pirates and the Confederate Navy advances and I thought the US Navy slumbered for most of the 19th century. HOWEVER, Macomber has managed very well to bring the US Navy to the world stage. The series has advanced quite spritely with "A Different Kind of Honor" being the best of the series so far. Remembering the fights between the diesel admirals and the nuclear admirals, I can well identify with the fight of the sail admirals and the Congressional penury versus the diesel admirals for a modern navy. I look forward to the next in the series.

Click Here to see more reviews about: A Different Kind of Honor (The Honor Series)



Buy NowGet 25% OFF

Click here for more information about A Different Kind of Honor (The Honor Series)

Read More...