Military  Military Forums

Home  |  Site Map

 

Off Topic Forums
    Military Forums  Hop To Forum Categories  General Military Discussions  Hop To Forums  Off Topic    Suggested Military Reading
Go
New
Find
Notify
Tools
Reply
  
-star Rating Rate It!  Login/Join 
Picture of CavScout19D30
Location: Germany
Registered: 14 February 2006
Posts: 299
Posted   Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post  
I, personally, have an extensive collection of Military Reading, both Fiction and Non, etc etc.

I figured I could burn up some bytes by picking everyone else's brain for some good reads. I think it a worthwhile campaign to expand my knowledge base.

The last book I read, very happy with:

Learning How To Eat Soup With a Knife
Counter-Insurgency Lessons Learned from Vietnam to Malaysia by Johnathan Nagl, COL, USA


"Brave Rifles! Veterans! You have been baptized in Fire and Blood, and come out Steel!"
Picture of patoloco
Location: Arizona
Registered: 08 May 2005
Posts: 1521
Posted   Hide PostReply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post  
OK, some of mine:

The Bear Went Over the Moutain by Grau
--Soviets experience against the Mujahadin

USMC Small Wars Manual

1776 by Mccullough
--George Washington's most difficult year

Ghost Soldiers by Sides
--Commonly known now as the movie "The Great Raid". It's a great story, but he sucks as a writer.

Flags of Our Fathers
--Flag raising on Iwo Jima and "the after story" - not really military, but a great read.

Band of Brothers by Ambrose
--The book that the TV miniseries was based on, airborne troops in WWII Europe
"Charletan and Montebank"
Registered: 16 February 2005
Posts: 1318
Posted   Hide PostReply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post  
See that Clint Eastwood is putting out a film on the Iwo Jiwa flagraisers as part of a two-part effort.. the second film will be about the Japanese side of the fight to hold the island..

Knowing the Squint, these should be two rich and worthwhile films...


Float like a Lepidoptera, Sting like a Hymenoptera
Picture of Guke
Location: Australia
Registered: 16 October 2006
Posts: 5
Posted   Hide PostReply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post  
I don't know if you can get this fiction author in the US his name is Bernard Cornwell. He rights a series called Sharpe's. There are 20 books in the series starting with Sharpe's Tiger and ending with Sharp's devil. The basic story line goes like this.Starting in 1799 following a young British army privates life in India at the siege of Seringapatam. The books that follow take him to some of the most famous battles in the British history eg. Trafalgar and Waterloo. The series ends with Sharp's Devil in 1821 by now a Colonel having been granted a commission after saving a generals life.

But if point blank British line infantry fighting of the 1800 is not your thing he has all so written a three book series called the Starbuck chronicles – books rebel, copperhead and battle flag all of which are on the US revolution.

If you can get your hands on one of his books there a good read
Picture of thegunny
Registered: 24 January 2005
Posts: 3057
Posted   Hide PostReply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post  
Check out the Biography Channel as they run a weekly show about Sharpe. Good series.


SEMPER FI
The Gunny

PROUD TO BE AN INFIDEL
I prefer to think that the chip on my shoulder gives the monkey on my back something to play with.

I have to exercise early in the morning before my brain figures out what I’m doing.

“The Meek shall inherit the earth….after I’m through with it.”
"Curmudgeon"
Picture of HarryP
Location: Washtenaw County, Michigan
Registered: 21 January 2005
Posts: 1777
Posted   Hide PostReply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post  
The Archer series is also good.


"It is fatal to enter any war without the will to win it"
DOUGLAS MacARTHUR, 1952
"Charletan and Montebank"
Registered: 16 February 2005
Posts: 1318
Posted   Hide PostReply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post  
As a consequence of my work, I always have a number of books on the go..

if you're interested in something other than ' modern military ' history, etc.. I recommend the following:
1]
Like Wolves on the Fold by Lt. Col. Mike Snook
the defence fo Rorkes Drift - Brits vs. Zulus.. more than a retelling an exceelent analysis.
2]
Doc Holliday, Gary D. Roberts biography good stuff as Wyatt Earp usually gets all the glory..
3]
Two books in my ' area of expertise' if you're interested -one from American perspective, the other a ' balanced' Canadian view of the same conflict.
For Honour's Sake -the War of 1812 and the brokering of an uneasy peace. Mark Zuehlke [ who wrote WWII books on Juno Beach and Battle of Ortona BTW ]
and 1812, the War tha Forged a Nation by Walter Borneman for the US ' version ' of events.

and, if anyone is actually interested in Canada's military history [ and we do have one! ] I recommend The Canadian Way of War by Lt. Col. Bernd Horn and a book on the ' secret war' in the 'recent' Bosnia/Kosovo UN debacle.. by Carol Off : The Ghosts of Medak Pocket about the Canadians fighting Serbian/Croat ..18 hour firefight no one has ever heard about...

enjoy

This message has been edited. Last edited by: Rocketeer,


Float like a Lepidoptera, Sting like a Hymenoptera
Picture of Airwinger
Registered: 06 March 2005
Posts: 361
Posted   Hide PostReply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post  
The biography on US Air Force Col. John Boyd, aptly named Boyd is a must read.

Not just because it is a good read with all of the necessary ingredients that anyone will appreciate that likes military reading, but it will totally open eyes on today's arguments of warfare doctrine.

Much of why Rumsfeld was so hated before 9/11 even happened, was his stance on military reformation, and Boyd covers that reformation back to the 1950s.

Also A Bloody Business was good but not spectacular. A book about the private military contractors in Iraq. It's more informative than entertaining, but it's the only straight forward presentation I've read about on PMCs. The rest are merely organs for the author's political agenda (read that as axe grinding).
"Curmudgeon"
Picture of HarryP
Location: Washtenaw County, Michigan
Registered: 21 January 2005
Posts: 1777
Posted   Hide PostReply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post  
Has anyone read AWOL: The Unexcused Absence of America’s Upper Classes from Military Service – and How It Hurts Our Country (Harper-Collins, 2006)?

I read an excerpt and it sounds like it might be worth reading the whole thing.


"It is fatal to enter any war without the will to win it"
DOUGLAS MacARTHUR, 1952
Picture of Old54B
Registered: 22 November 2006
Posts: 5
Posted   Hide PostReply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post  
It`s fiction, but W.E.B. Griffin is REALLY good!
Most of his stuff is based on WWII. I haven`t read a bood of his I didn`t like. Very in depth and realistic. True to the "soldier" not some
Hollywood idea of what it`s like.


A good plan violently executed today is better than a perfect plan executed tomorrow.
George S. Patton
 Previous Topic | Next Topic powered by eve community  
 

    Military Forums  Hop To Forum Categories  General Military Discussions  Hop To Forums  Off Topic    Suggested Military Reading

DESCRIPTION: MilitarySpot.com - Online Military Community and More!
LINKS:
military - military loans - military shopping - military singles - pioneer military loans - va loans