I'm sorry it isn't Phill Steele's 2012 Preview, spoiler alert Jake Spavital ends up sucking
Not on my copy unfortunately !VanZandt92 said:BigJim49 AustinNowDallas said:
Ian Fleming's " Thrilling Cities " . Entertaining - didn't like Vienna or it's people ! Cheap room rates - course
it was written in 60s .
Hmmm
VanZandt92 said:VanZandt92 said:
Written by a Texas A&M author, I just read The Yankee Plague, Escaped Union Prisoners. I highly recommend it!
https://www.uncpress.org/book/9781469630557/the-yankee-plague/
I just want to go back and bump this. Any student of the era and any Southerner will be fascinated.
always looking for a good war history however I seldom find much on WW2 new or worth the read. What makes this VDH ( who I like) tome worth the read?dschwab said:
Just finished reading Victor David Hanson's book "The Second World Wars" . Excellent reading for students of modern history. Many long run on sentences made it somewhat difficult to read and comprehend for me. Nonetheless gained a great deal of understanding on what made this global conflict inevitable; and why we must avoid these mistakes in the future.
Quote:
About Face - David Hackworth
If you're a student of history it may not reveal much. I'm not however and since I retired last year after over 40 years in petrochemicals I now have time to read for pleasure and I like recent American history. The book, and it is a tome, deepened my understanding of the War. What most impressed me was the magnitude of the war. For example, the world population was reduced by around 3% during and as a result of the war; the Soviet built T-34 tank was considered a model of armor and production en mass; the Wehrmacht's killing efficiency of combatants exceeded that of any other Axis and Allied military; from 1939 to 1941, the British single handedly fought on the Burma/India, Western European, Balkan and North African fronts as well as in the Atlantic until America and the Soviet Union entered the war; and only 10 or 12 nations of the world declared themselves neutral during the conflict.The Original AG 76 said:always looking for a good war history however I seldom find much on WW2 new or worth the read. What makes this VDH ( who I like) tome worth the read?dschwab said:
Just finished reading Victor David Hanson's book "The Second World Wars" . Excellent reading for students of modern history. Many long run on sentences made it somewhat difficult to read and comprehend for me. Nonetheless gained a great deal of understanding on what made this global conflict inevitable; and why we must avoid these mistakes in the future.
who?mikejones said:
I'm reading A Hanging in Nacogdoches. It's quite an interesting read about a 1902 lynching, sheriff and newspaper editor.
VanZandt92 said:who?mikejones said:
I'm reading A Hanging in Nacogdoches. It's quite an interesting read about a 1902 lynching, sheriff and newspaper editor.
Wow. History is too real Sometimes ometimes.
thank you. I may pick it up since I like VDH and his style. I really like the metrics you stated..thats the kind of " new" stuff I enjoy.dschwab said:If you're a student of history it may not reveal much. I'm not however and since I retired last year after over 40 years in petrochemicals I now have time to read for pleasure and I like recent American history. The book, and it is a tome, deepened my understanding of the War. What most impressed me was the magnitude of the war. For example, the world population was reduced by around 3% during and as a result of the war; the Soviet built T-34 tank was considered a model of armor and production en mass; the Wehrmacht's killing efficiency of combatants exceeded that of any other Axis and Allied military; from 1939 to 1941, the British single handedly fought on the Burma/India, Western European, Balkan and North African fronts as well as in the Atlantic until America and the Soviet Union entered the war; and only 10 or 12 nations of the world declared themselves neutral during the conflict.The Original AG 76 said:always looking for a good war history however I seldom find much on WW2 new or worth the read. What makes this VDH ( who I like) tome worth the read?dschwab said:
Just finished reading Victor David Hanson's book "The Second World Wars" . Excellent reading for students of modern history. Many long run on sentences made it somewhat difficult to read and comprehend for me. Nonetheless gained a great deal of understanding on what made this global conflict inevitable; and why we must avoid these mistakes in the future.
May not be your cup of tea, but for me it was.
interesting tidbit, thanksCanyonAg77 said:Quote:
About Face - David Hackworth
I don't recall which Hackworth book it was, but in one, he mentions the finest young infantry officer he ever had under his command. He also says he was a graduate of Oklahoma A&M.
He was a fine man, but he was a Texas Aggie, not an OK A&M grad. Joe Stokes '50. A wonderful man who served his commission commitment in Korea, and came home to my old home town of Hale Center to live out his life. His son was my Aggie and high school classmate.
Try Rebel Yell. It's about Stonewall Jacksoncmiller00 said:
Well finished Grant last night. Need to find a new book. Thinking I might stay on the Civil War era. Suggestions?
RPag said:
Just finished: The Model Occupation by Madeleine Bunting; covers the Nazi occupation of British Channel Islands. Fascinating study of how collaborators were willingly found wherever the Nazis had influence.
Currently reading: Gulag, a History by Anne Applebaum; an in-depth history of the gulag system.
On deck: The Years of Extermination by Saul Friedlander; one of the greatest histories of the Holocaust ever compiled.