I'm taking a bread from How Rome Fell to read the WWII memoir, With the Old Breed by E.B. Sledge. As an enlisted Marine, Sledge fought on Peleliu and Okinawa. His first-hand account of the battles makes for gripping reading. I highly recommend it. Apparently, this book was one of several used as the basis for the HBO miniseries, The Pacific.
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Found it at the library....
HOGs in the shadows: combat stories from Marine snipers in Iraq by Milo S. Afong. I'm partway into it, and it is well-written. It's a collection of reports from different snipers and teams.
I also picked up one by a British sniper, but I forgot the title-- Prince of Wales' Regiment, I remember that much. I'm not a sniper-fanatic, but they do make for good reading pretty often, and as very small teams, they make for good RPG fodder. I can't remember the last time I tied a PC group in knots with a sniper..... :D |
I heard an interview this morning on NPR with Sebastian Junger, author of A Perfect Storm, about his new book, War. It's about an American platoon manning a remote outpost in Afghanistan that endured near constant combat for several months. It sounds really interesting and I really enjoyed his earlier work. I usually wait for books to come out in paperback but I may end up springing for this one.
Anyone here read it already? |
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When I watched Sharpe on TV it reminded me of The Man Who Would Be King (film) based on the Rudyard Kipling story of the same name (The Man Who Would Be King). Anyone here seen that film? It was truly excellent, made a big impresion on me as a kid. It starred Sean Connery and Michael Caine. I can't recommend it highly enough.
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yes.
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I finished 'HOGs', it was pretty good. Nearly all of the stories are from 2003-04, and only one from '05. |
The Village and Once a Warrior King are both about Vietnam, but about low and slow counter-insurgency work, rather than big search and destroy operations or sexy LRRP work on the wrong side of the Cambodian border. Very good primers, I think, for a game or scenario where PCs put down roots in some surviving settlement.
Most anything about Rhodesia puts me in mind of how things might look in those places where a central government is still intact and fighting against enemy forces or marauder bands. War on a shoestring budget. |
'Once a Warrior King' is a great read, highly recommend it!
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Unlike Blackhawk Down, it doesn't have a coherent narrative thread- it's more a collection of related events over a two-year period- but it's just about as good. I highly recommend it. The author was also making an award-winning, feature length documentary while he was researching/reporting the events in the book. It's called Restrepo and it's not yet been released. I can't wait to see it. |
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I just finished The Last Stand of Fox Company about a besieged U.S. Marine unit cut off on a hill guarding a pass during the Chosin Resevoir battles of the Korean War. It's really good and I highly recommend it. Right now, it's available on Amazon for only $6. It's well worth it.
http://www.amazon.com/Last-Stand-Fox...8243720&sr=8-1 |
East of Chosin is another good read from that place and time, about the US Army regimental combat team on the other side of the resevoir across from the USMC. For the most part they didn't make it out -- I think something like 70-80 survivors stumbled into the relative safety of the Marines' lines after they were surrounded and plowed under by taking their chances walking out across the ice on the resevoir itself.
Apparently their situation was stable and they were holding their own as long as the ammunition held for the quad-50s and 40mm AA guns, but once those went black they weren't able to keep the Chinese at bay effectively. |
Tobruk by Peter Fitzsimons, published by Harper Collins. A very in-depth and illustrated chronicle of the part of the North African campaign in the title. I bought 3 copies, one for myself, one for my father and one for my future father in law. It means alot to my father and myself because my grandfather was a New Zealand infantry captain when he fought in the battles for Tobruk.
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The Boys From Baghdad- Simon Lowe
My dad read this and slung it my direction when he was finished. A man who was in the British Army for seven years, went on to serve with the French Foreign Legion for a decade then decides to become a PMC with ArmorGroup in Iraq, guarding convoys. Ambushes and friendly fire incidents all seem to be in a days work for this guy. McAleese's Fighting Manual-Peter McAleese An ex British para, with experience in Aden and the like, he went on to do mercenary work in Angola for the FNLA (Taking over from the infamous Colonel Callan). After that he served in Rhodesia with their SAS during the Bush War, continuing onto South Africa after it ended. Even after a parachute accident, this man went on to do some mercenary work in Colombia before training Russian bodyguards. His manual is a book describing the basics of small-scale infantry combat. Its clearly orientated around the platoon and is chock full of anecdotes of his experiences, particularly those in Africa. He's a big fan of low-tech solutions and has an endless array of dirty tricks to divulge. A veyr interesting read. Also, good to see Sniper One getting some love here. Absolutely fantastic book! |
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Not quite a recommendation today, but an update. Daniel P. Bolger wrote several really good books that I am sure I mentioned upthread ("Battle for Hunger Hill," "Dragons in the desert" to name just two). I was downloading an article he wrote in 1991, and thought to look for him on Wikipedia. He's been promoted to Lieutenant General after commanding the 1st Cavalry Division.
And, another operational-level WW2 book that I love now: "The battle for western Europe: fall 1944," by John A. Adams. |
Meh -- Bolger wrote cheerleading pieces reflecting whatever unit he was assigned to. When his mech infantry book started talking about how M113s with 50 cals were BMP killing machines I pretty much realized he'd given me permission to ignore anything else he had to say (though I suffered through a couple more of his books along the way).
I'm not surprised to hear he made general and is moving up the chain at that level. He struck me (from his books) as the kind of guy who'd do well on the political side of the career track. |
I recently ordered online a copy of A Bright Shining Lie: John Paul Vann and America in Vietnam by Neil Sheehan (I read it years ago but lost my original copy). Vann was a really unusual guy, very outspoken, was basically forced out of the US Army as Lt Col during the Vietnam War because what he was trying to tell the top brass about the war in Vietnam was very unpopular. He went back to Vietnam with USAID and ended up commanding troops as a civilian with similar authority to a general. Was also a close personal friend of Dan Ellsberg's.
Vann had many personal failings and no doubt pissed off a lot of people but he was a very interesting character. I recommend this book. |
I saw the (not so great) made for HBO movie version and have been wanting to read the book for some time -- Vann does seem like one of those "in case of war break glass" sort of guys, but even then made the fatal faux pas of committing the truth, which is rarely popular and probably about as big a mistake as anyone could make among the Vietnam era senior military and political leadership . . .
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Here's a few from the stacks:
Carlson's Raid, The Daring Marine Assault on Makin by George Smith. Best account of the August, 1942 raid that I've found. Well researched. Omaha Beach, A Flawed Vistory by Adrian Lewis, Traces the development of the Omaha assault plan including how the tactical leadership were opposed to the entire plan. A good read that blows a few holes in some popular misconceptions of the battle. Unheralded Victory, The Defeat of the Viet Kong and the North Vietnamese Army 1961-1973 by Mark Woodruff. An intresting read concerning the tactical defeat of the VC/NVA and their final political victory. |
I'll add Beevor's D-Day to the list. Along with Paul Carrell's two books on the Eastern Front: Hitler Moves East and Scorched Earth.
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Oh, I'm well aware of that...I first read them when I was in college, and a professor who also had the books pointed that out-especially the lack of any treatment of partisan warfare or the Einsatzgruppen's activities. Too bad he never did a final book to tell the final story from Summer '44 to the end. Though Antony Beevor's book on Berlin treats the Vistula-Oder Offensive and Pomerania well enough.
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I finished reading The Gun by C. J. Chivers a couple of weeks ago, which is a history of the AK-47. It offers a good history about the development of automatic guns and the effect of the AK on the world stage.
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Here's a couple of more titles...
"The Last Hundred Yards", this one is a intro guide for USMC NCOs, useful since it breaks down a lot of the leadership tasks into easy to digest blocks. Very useful for non-military players to get a feel for how things work. "The Myth of the Great War, How the Germans Won the Battles and How the Americans Saved the Allies." By John Mosier. Title says it all, its a well researched book by an author who took the time to research the German, French, and Italian military archives. His conclusions will certainly send any Anglophile into near-earth orbit. Everything from the Allied High Command lying to the civilian government, to mislabeling maps as to exactly where the front lines are. Take the time to set down and read it, then research his sources.....it certainly leaves you questioning some of the popular myths of WWI.... |
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Keeping the AK theme going I'd also recommend 'AK-47 The weapon that changed the face of war' by Larry Kahaner.
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There's been a glut of books on the AK over the past 5 years or so. I guess a bunch of authors realized that the 60th anniversary of the Kalashnikov assault rifle '47 was coming up and they all started working on books to hit stores at around that time.
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For anyone who enjoyed Once a Warrior King, I can also recommend Chickenhawk, by Robert Mason. It is an excellent account of a novice helicopter pilot learning his trade with the 1st Cav in Vietnam, with some very revealing stuff later on about the effects of combat fatigue.
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Just finished Dead Men Risen by Toby Harnden (ISBN 9781849164214),
There are a number of books now available about the British Army in Afghanistan and this one is, in my opinion, one of the best I've read. It covers the Welsh Guards 2009 tour, during which they lost their Commanding Officer and a Company Commander to IED's. Highly, highly recommended. |
The wrong war: grit, strategy and the way out of Afghanistan by "Bing" West.
West is also the author of the classic The Village, about a Combined Action Platoon in Vietnam. This is his book about hanging around Marines and soldiers in 2009 and 2010, and his recommendations as well. I thought the patrol reporting was well done, and the suggestions clear. He does not over-hype the "Well, when I was in Vietnam, we did this..." angle, but he does draw parallels when they can be seen. In fact, he spends a fair amount of time on the places where classic Counterinsurgency prescriptions won't work, such as where the locals are deeply hostile, and the local government is too corrupt or incompetent to deliver meaningful services. |
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On The Way
These Osprey titles haven't been released yet, at least in the U.S., but they promise to have quite a bit of potential for the classic T2K'er:
1. Vietnam Gun-Trucks 2. Special Operations Patrol Vehicles (Afghanistan & Iraq) 3. LAV-25 http://www.amazon.com/Vietnam-Gun-Tr...1302416&sr=8-1 http://www.amazon.com/Special-Operat...ref=pd_sim_b_7 http://www.amazon.com/LAV-25-New-Van...ref=pd_sim_b_1 |
I just bought "Licensed to kill" by Robert Young Pelton. More Merc than T2K. I've only read the first 3 or 4 chapters, it has been a great read so far with subject material to come later in the book which i am more interested in.
http://www.amazon.com/Licensed-Kill-.../dp/1400097819 |
One Second Later William R Forstchen. EMP attack on the US, and survival in a rather populated area of western North Carolina. Very interesting perspectives. The book, written a few years ago, was actually submitted to congress, or at least one of the committees.
Sorry if it was already mentioned. |
Sniping in France, by Herbert Hesketh-Prichard. The author was a big game hunter, who became involved in the training of snipers and scouts in WW1. It has a lot of interesting material about camouflage, and the use of hides for snipers. The fictional sniper in Gerald Seymour's Holding the Zero had a copy in his rucksack!
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