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Showing 141 - 160 of 17241 items
By Claud Sykes, Major Helders. 2018
In War in the Air 1936 which was first published in English in 1932 author Robert Knauss…
fantasizes about a confrontation between England and France Writing under the pseudonym Major Helders and using detailed descriptions of battles strategies and weaponry Knauss aim is for the reader to realize that air power in general and flying fortress bombers in particular would decide the outcome of the next war In this novel the hero is the English air force commander Brackley a carbon copy of the imaginary German leaders in other right-wing prophecies firm mysterious infallible In times of crisis he surveys the situation with lightning speed His war is one of movement of risk-taking of annihilation Modern airplane technology allows him to carry out a style of warfare that fits his chivalric warrior spirit Only for an instant does he pity the population of Paris as his planes pour bombs over the city in a surprise attack Pity though is not a virtue in the nationalist mind though Vernichtungswille the will to annihilate isBy Gen Walter Bedell Smith. 2018
MY THREE YEARS IN MOSCOW is a good deal more than an account of diplomatic negotiations General Smith undertook…
to study the whole framework of Soviet life-the people their leaders and their institutions In this study he had the help of a large and well-informed staff and in addition he has had the advantage of closer personal contact with Marshal Stalin than any other Westerner There are vivid portraits of the men who run the Soviet Union all the way from the members of the all-powerful Politburo to the director of a small collective farm There are revealing discussions of the efficiency of Soviet industry and agriculture In the course of his duties General Smith met numbers of Russians of all kinds and his pages contain fascinating sketches of them thus building a picture of the life of the ordinary man in a collectivized economy The American Ambassador had his own housekeeping problems like the incident of the supply of fresh eggs which eventually involved ponderous governmental machinery MY THREE YEARS IN MOSCOW is one of the important books of our time distinguished in its character and permanent in historical value casts more light on the Soviet system on Marshal Stalin and on the tortuous twists and turns of Soviet policy than anything published thus far The New York TimesHIS STORY IS HERE but Tom Treanor the young correspondent of the Los Angeles Times is off…
to the wars again Meanwhile of the present book he says Alice never saw more different things in Wonderland than I ve seen since June 13 1942 I ve rung the changes from Chungking to Anzio and written 1 000 words a day about it Because it s all too new and confusing I can t explain any of the riddle I can only give you the world all disconnected just as I saw it in travelling a sequence of separate worlds nearly as crazy independent and self-centered as they were in Columbus time I have no theme but only a pocketful of pictures That s what he thinks Well he may not have a theme but he has an astounding knack for being in places where things happen a high-octane sense of the ludicrous and a zest and zip in his writing that make his book tops in entertainment It is emphatically the war book with a differenceBy James Atkinson, Adm Arleigh A Burke. 2018
Originally published in 1960 in The Edge of War Georgetown University associate professor and author James David Atkinson provides…
an examination of both the Western and Communist approaches to war He also covers the evolution of unconventional war and includes case histories of Guatemala and the stand-up of the Shah of Iran It is a privilege to have the opportunity to state my agreement with Dr Atkinson s general thesis and especially his observation that warfare of the latter part of the 20th Century is above all a battle of the spirit of ideas and of the human will This battle will be fought in the hearts in the minds and in the souls of men everywhere It is hoped that this book will serve to awaken many to this fact Adm Arleigh A BurkeBy George Crocker. 2018
Many people will be made angry by this book They will be angry first at its author for daring…
to attack the memory of Franklin Delano Roosevelt Then as they read with an increasing sense of shame this shocking story of the summit conferences of World War II they will be moved to anger at F D R himself The trust which the American people bestowed in the leadership of Roosevelt is a matter of historical record The manner in which the four-times President used that trust is only little by little coming to be realized The truth is that ever since victory was won western civilization has been at bay with men everywhere preparing for new wars What went wrong Was there a monstrous miscalculation Bad faith in high places Incompetence What really happened at the fateful summit conferences of World War II The documents notes and memoirs of men who were there at Casablanca Teheran and Yalta and the others how now dredged up the pieces of a horrendous jigsaw puzzle ROOSEVELT S ROAD TO RUSSIA for the first time puts the pieces together Crocker has presented this sad epoch in American history more interestingly and more competently than any previous writer he gives the first complete picture of just how and why we lost the peace it is an important contribution to the history of our times We are in danger of being deceived by Khrushchev as Roosevelt was deceived by Stalin Let us read this record as Crocker has faithfully compiled it and heed the warning H V Kaltenhorn A tale of colossal incompetence monstrous misunderstanding outrages of freedom it should be read by everyone who wants to understand the world today The Chicago Tribune a scholarly brief with all the logic and persuasion of a grand jury presentation Columbus DispatchBy Chesly Manly. 2018
In The Twenty-Year Revolution from Roosevelt to Eisenhower which was first published in 1954 author Chesly Manly …
the United Nations Correspondent of the Chicago Tribune leaves practically no part of government operation untouched He covers the advent of the New Deal the first year of the Eisenhower administration with revelations of diplomatic relations with an implacable enemy subversion of national policies by collectivist legal and economic experts willful toleration of communist infiltration into the government active encouragement of such infiltration into the labor unions and wilful toleration of communist infiltration into the government to active encouragement of such infiltration into the labor unions and reliance upon the Communists for political support A gripping readBy Erika Kuhlman. 2016
This book usesstory-telling to recreate the history of German veteran migration after theFirst World War. German veterans of the Great…
War were among Europe's mostvolatile population when they returned to a defeated nation in 1918, aftergreat expectations of victory and personal heroism. Some ex-servicemen chose toflee the nation for which they had fought, and begin their lives afresh in thenation against which they had fought: the United States.By Cmdr Denys Arthur Rayner. 2018
DUEL AT SEAFrom the moment the radar indicated a German sub the captain of the destroyer Hecate knew he…
would achieve his life s ambition a duel to the death in deserted waters between his ship and an enemy submarine Below the choppy sea sped the U-121 commanded by Kapit n von Stolberg an efficient brutal sailor who also welcomed a fight to the finish but for a different reason His submarine was entrusted with a mission that could prove catastrophic to the Allied war effort Nothing least of all a British destroyer must stand in his way Plotting his strategy like a deadly game of chess the destroyer captain doggedly tailed the elusive sub Depth charge answered torpedo cannon matched gun and finally man faced man in a climactic battle for supremacy at sea THE ENEMY BELOW was also made into the Academy Award winning 1957 movie starring Robert Mitchum and Curt J rgens and produced and directed by Dick Powell THE ENEMY BELOW Simply terrific Christian HeraldTHE ENEMY BELOW Commander Rayner has spun a grand yarn The battle he has described is a thriller a cross between a game of chess and a hunt to the death He tells it well with mounting suspense much clever manipulation of the possibilities of naval action and with a slam-bang climax which ought to be terrific in the forthcoming movie The New York TimesTHE ENEMY BELOW A thumping good narrative of primordial war at sea told from an unusual point of view The New York Times Book ReviewBy Cmdr. Denys Arthur Rayner. 2018
This rousing World War II tale is set in February 1943. H.M.S. destroyer ‘Hecate’ is pulled out of convoy escort…
duty to tow the crippled (and abandoned) Greek tanker ‘Antioch’ 500 miles across the North Atlantic from the spot where she had been attacked by a German wolfpack to the safety of a British port. The ‘Antioch’, at 15,000 tons, had been the largest ship in her convoy and her cargo of four million gallons of high-octane petroleum (enough to send 2,000 Wellington bombers to Berlin and back) is of vital importance to Britain’s wartime economy.Initially angered by their rather inglorious assignment, the warship’s officers and crew slowly begin to take pride in their towing assignment as they try and fend off a German U-boat and a succession of Luftwaffe warplanes after the ‘Antioch’ and ‘Hecate’ are spotted by a German reconnaissance airplane....By Cmdr. Denys Arthur Rayner. 2018
THEY KNEW THEY WOULD NOT RETURN…Having outrun their supply lines, they now await the enemy’s counterattack…In order to determine the…
enemy’s intention the brigade commander is compelled to expose one company to certain destruction. At the height of the battle, the commander of the ‘suicide’ company appeals for assistance to an armoured unit. Its young troop officer hesitates.Dare he disobey order to prevent a massacre?“It is a gem: the day-long battle is vastly exciting, words are not wasted. Effects are as sure as the characters. Commander Rayner has great writing talent.”—DAILY EXPRESS“In a tense series of battle scenes an unexpected and entirely unplanned victory is won. An exciting engagement which also provokes speculation about men in action and morale.”—BOOKS OF THE MONTHBy Heinrich Hoffmann, Lt. 2014
Heinrich Hoffmann was the photographer to kings princes and the glitterati of the first half of the 20th…
Century His archive of images ran into the millions and he grew to be rich and moderately famous An assistant in London to Emil Otto Hopp the undisputed leader of pictorial portraiture in Europe at the time Hoffmann returned to Germany progressed through the tumult of WWI into the chaos of the Weimar and there he came into contact with an idealist with a growing following Adolf Hitler As official court photographer Heinrich Hoffmann played a critical role in the painstaking cultivation of Hitler s public image and the glorification of the Third Reich However his influence stretched far beyond the realm of propaganda not only was he present during many of the key moments in the history of the Third Reich he was also a close personal friend of the F hrer with exclusive and intimate access to Hitler s inner circle and to the man himself It was Hoffmann who introduced Hitler to Eva Braun his studio assistant It was also Hoffmann with whom Hitler was on a trip from Munich to Hamburg when the F hrer received word that his beloved niece Geli Raubal had committed suicide Hoffmann took over two million photographs of Hitler and published several books including The Hitler Nobody Knows 1933 At the end of the war Hoffmann was arrested by the U S military who seized his photographic archive and was sentenced to imprisonment for Nazi profiteering These memoirs were first published in English in 1955 four years after his release from prison and represent a crucial eyewitness source for the historian and general reader alikeBy John Leeming. 2018
In November 1940 an R A F aeroplane crashed near Catania Sicily On board were Air…
Marshal O T Boyd on his way to Cairo as Air Officer Commanding Middle East and John Leeming a member of his staff who before the war was a well-known private pilot and the author of several amusing books Air Marshal Boyd and Mr Leeming were taken prisoner by the Italians and six months later they were joined by a bevy of generals and other senior British officers including Major-General Neame V C Lieutenant-General O Connor Major-General Carton de Wiart V C and Major-General Gambier-Perry Always To-morrow which was first published in 1951 is an account of the life as prisoners of war in Italy of this group of high ranking officers beginning with the aircraft crash in Sicily which wrecked the career of Air Marshal Boyd Widely regarded as one of the most amusing books written about World War II the hopes and disappointments of the several attempts at escape are told in a most entertaining way and the lack of emphasis on the less amusing aspects of life as a prisoner of war only serves to underline the unfailing courage enterprise and patience of these senior officers The funniest war story of all Leeming s adventures as a prisoner of the Italians are told with a rare humour and a keen eye for the absurd There is drama too in his story but Mr Leeming is irrepressible Sunday GraphicBy Herbert Dirksen. 2018
First published in English in 1951 these are the fascinating memoirs of a high level German diplomat detailing…
his many years of work within German Embassies at Moscow Tokyo London and elsewhere The book provides extensive information on the formulation of foreign policy international negotiations and treaties during the Nazi era as well as the interwar period The aim of this book is to give an account of a political career spent almost exclusively in Eastern European and Far Eastern countries The task assigned to me by Hitler in London was that of a letter-carrier My efforts to break the shackles imposed on me and to oppose a policy which was bound to lead to the catastrophe of the Second World War proved futile Herbert von DirksenBy U S Army. 2018
First published just a year after the end of the war this is the story of the Second Infantry…
Division in World War II It is the story of innumerable acts of fortitude and courage of individual sacrifice and devotion to duty under fire by a fighting division which has served with honor in two world wars Closely following actual combat operations brief editions of our participation in World War II were published With the passage of time the need for a more authentic and comprehensive history of this period has become evident This book is designed to meet that need This history shows that from D 1 to V-E Day our Division in the face of repeated fanatical enemy action was employed constantly as a spearhead shock division and that in this role it maintained unblemished its proud record of never having failed to take its objective nor of having relinquished ground so gained During operations we were concerned with our immediate task Now in the light of subsequent events and broader perspective the importance to the nation and to our army of our successes becomes increasingly evident W M Robertson Major-General U S ArmyBy Thomas Jonter. 2016
Why have some nations acquired nuclear weapons while others have refrained from doing so? Most research related to this question…
has focused on states that have built nuclear weapons, yet little attention has been devoted to countries that have chosen nuclear restraint. This book analyzes Swedish plans to acquire nuclear weapons during the Cold War. Sweden was very close to putting a bomb together in 1960s but, for a number of reasons illuminated in this book, decision makers abandoned those plans and subsequently rose to become one of the most recognized players in the international game of disarmament. Thanks to the recent declassification of essential documentation in Sweden and United States, it is now possible to assemble a comprehensive analysis of the Swedish nuclear weapons program based on primary sources. This book presents that analysis, a unique perspective owing to the fact that nuclear development is a highly secretive activity in most countries - with non-existent or limited access to state archives.By David Martin, Dame West. 2018
David Martin a distinguished journalist political analyst and staff member on the Senate Judiciary Committee first published…
his book ALLY BETRAYED in 1946 Having devoted his life to uncovering the truth and to defending Mihailovich Martin s book asks the crucial questions 1 Why did the Allied press which had made a great hero of Mihailovich as a resister of Axis invaders of Yugoslavia begin to play him down after 1942 2 What was Tito s past And where was the radio station located that heralded his appearance in Yugoslavia 3 What decision was reached at Teheran with respect to Tito and Mihailovich 4 How was the ALLIED military intelligence about Yugoslavia falsified 5 Why did Churchill say of Yugoslavia I was deceived and badly informed David Martin was born in Ontario Canada in 1914 Before World War II he wrote on Canadian affairs for Current History The Nation The New Republic the New Leader and other journals He joined the Canadian Air Force in October 1942 became a pilot and flew on the Burmese frontier He was honorably discharged in 1946 With a Foreword by Dame Rebecca West one of Mihailovich s most avid supporters Solid reading Kirkus ReviewBy Margaret Bourke. 2018
THIS IS the story of the search for Faceless Fritz the most…
difficult and frightening camera-hunt ever undertaken by ace photographer-reporter Margaret Bourke-White Fearless Fritz was cable shorthand for one of several LIFE assignments that brought Miss Bourke-White and her camera to Germany some months before its fall She was to pin down the private German citizens to find out what kind of human being it was who multiplied by millions made up the Nazi terror Was he cruel Was he a villain Or was he a jolly gemutlich beer-drinking music-loving sentimentalist so many of us remembered who had really been helpless in the power of a small gang of madmen By the time Margaret Bourke-White arrived in Germany on this mission she had seen much death and danger She had been in Moscow during its fiercest bombings In Italy she had come closer to the enemy lines than any American woman before her But it was in Germany that cold horror overtook her The Germany that Miss Bourke-White saw and recorded in this book puts to shame Dali s most grotesque nightmares It is a physical and spiritual chamber of horrors a cuckoo-cloud land whose inhabitants live in a lost dream They are the people whose faces are as usual and recognizable as neighbors but whose reactions do not seem to make sense Dear Fatherland Rest Quietly which was first published in 1946 takes its title from the words of the anthem Die Wacht am Rhein to which German soldiers have marched three times in the memory of many now living It brings new light to bear on the German people in the hope that through a more immediate understanding of them a fourth march may be averted Richly illustrated throughout with 128 of her photographs with detailed captions forming an integral part of Margaret Bourke-White s important report on conquered GermanyBy J T MacCurdy. 2014
During World War I when Captain J T MacCurdy a Canadian psychiatrist and Cornell University lecturer…
was despatched on a special mission to Britain he undertook one of the earliest studies of war neuroses The new factor was the availability of high explosives following Nobel s discovery of dynamite in 1867 nitroglycerin and diatomaceous earth and developments thereof such as trinitrotoluene TNT and picric acid High explosives were a boon to the mining and the civil engineer but inflicted terrible injuries on combatants Shell shock or as we would now call it post-traumatic stress disorder resulted from extreme experiences on the battlefield injury concussion being buried alive or simply the scale of the slaughter This book which was first published in 1943 contains the text of lectures delivered by Dr J T MacCurdy to groups of officers from the army and the auxiliary women s services early in WWII MacCurdy continuing on from his findings during WWI discusses the nature of fear the national factors at play in the creation and sustainability of morale with reference to the Allied and Axis powers and the significance of psychological factors in practice in an organized community This intelligent objective analysis of the nature of the psychological factor in war was intended for the British soldier but its interest and application are universal Foreign AffairsBy Michael J. Durant, Steven Hartov. 2003
In the autumn of 1993, American special forces were dispatched to the famine-stricken land of Somalia. Their intervention in this…
war-torn country was the most dramatic US military action since Vietnam. A routine mission went horribly wrong when Michael Durant's Black Hawk helicopter was shot down over Mogadishu and he was quickly surrounded by Somali troops and taken captive. The brutal torture he underwent was made all too clear to the world when his coerced statements were broadcast on live television and his battered face appeared on the cover of magazines around the globe. Michael Durant's ordeal was first described in Mark Bowden's international bestseller Black Hawk Down and the critically acclaimed film of the same name. This, his first-person gripping account tells of bravery under fire, torture, imprisonment, and the terrifying day by day reality for a soldier, unarmed and helpless in enemy hands, fighting to survive.By Tom Carhart. 2010
The gripping story of six West Point graduates who fought each other in the Civil War. With Civil War clouds…
darkening the horizon, they were strangers from different states thrown together as West Point cadets: George Armstrong Custer, Stephen Dodson Ramseur, Henry Algernon DuPont, John Pelham, Thomas Lafayette Rosser, and Wesley Merritt. Right after their graduations, war erupted in 1861. They stayed blue or went gray, and even faced each other in battle. Acclaimed military historian Tom Carhart vividly brings to life these young men of valor and honor, and the valiant victories and crushing defeats of the war. They made their marks on the history of a new nation split apart, then reunited and reborn-but only at the cost of the blood of brothers.