History Books


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History Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

History
Hologram of Liberty: The Constitution's Shocking Alliance With Big Government
Published in Paperback by Javelin Pr (1997-10)
Authors: Kenneth W. Royce and Boston T. Party
List price: $24.00
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Average review score:

Outstanding--the Book will change your Belief in the Constitution.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-09
The brilliant Hamilton wanted a strong central government but he knew that is not what the people at the time wanted. He made certain it gave the illusion of giving the power to the individual states while, in fact, it was worded to allow the centralized government to gain all the power. The Bill of Rights slowed the process down but not for long.

There is little I can add to the other reviews except to say no one could have held the Constitution in higher esteem than I. The book shredded my faith in the Constitution by showing the historical facts and logically explaining how a careful reading proves the intent of the Constitution was to provide for strong centralized government.

Hamilton made certain that the Constitution could not enforce itself and that there was no provision whereby the people could enforce the Constitution. The power to enforce any dispute went to the centralized government.

One of the Best I've Read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-05
This is one of the best books I've read regarding the history, background, major players, and most of all the flaws inherent in the Constitution of the United States. Those who worship this document are doomed to continue repeating the cycle of ignorance.

The Constitution is a great document, possibly the greatest governmental framework ever made by man, but it is flawed. Sure, maybe it was inspired by God, but that doesn't mean He wrote it. It's imperfect. Live with it.

Boston does a great job whittling down where those flaws are, why they're there, and who was responsible. The Founding Fathers were two-fold: The Founding Activists and the Founding Lawyers. The lawyers, principally Hamilton, are who Boston exposes in this book.

This is probably the best book he's written to-date, and I've read all of them.

constitution
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-12
The book title is exactly descriptive.For those who want the truth of the constitution,start your research here.The fatal flaw in Ron Paul's platform is that he relies on the constitution.If the foundation of the house is built with defects then the house (u.s. government) will be defective and will eventually collapse.If you want to see what the civil laws of good government are, then study the Torah.May I suggest a Messianic viewpoint for the best understanding.Shalom.

Bostons Best
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-26
His best work and it will make you think. He effectively questions the lame assumptions, propaganda, and hero worship that were drilled into most of us in the government un-schools.


I had to read this one again almost immediately after I finished it the first time.

Another home run by Boston T Party
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-20
For years I have heard that the adoption of the Constitution was a victory of the wealthy upper class of the former American colonies over the common people. Liberals have used this fantasy to push their view of an "organic" Constitution that must change with the times - change in ways that promote a liberal statist agenda, that is. Royce shows that there is in fact much truth to the liberal claims - the Constitution was a clever shell game, designed to hoodwink most Americans into thinking they were getting a free democratic republic, while in actuality laying the groundwork for a strong, and eventually oppressive, central government. But Royce's conclusions are totally different from the liberal's - he persuasively calls for amending the Constitution to push the country back in the direction of freedom and individual rights. Royce also backs up everything he says with solid research and quotes from the Founders, both those who favored the Constitution, and those who opposed and feared it for the threat it posed to individual liberties (the latter included Patrick Henry and Thomas Jefferson). For those trying to figure out how we have strayed so far from the freedom that the American Revolution was fought for, Hologram of Liberty is a must read.

History
I Never Saw Another Butterfly
Published in Paperback by Schocken (1994-03-15)
Author: Hana Volavkova
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Average review score:

poignant
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-11
This book is a must for teachers, parents, and children 10 years old and up. It should read with children and an adult together and should have some Holocaust background explained first. If we want future generations to know what happened, we must tell them

Great Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-11
This is a really good book. It was a great tool for teaching my daughter about the Holocaust. The best thing about the book is that you are seeing pictures and poetry that was created by the children of one of the most terrible tragedies in history.

The Butterfly Project
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-15
This collection of works is mostly by children who were imprisoned in the Terezin ghetto during the Holocaust. Their writing is hauntingly and painfully honest, devastating, and heartbreaking. Yet, with death all around them, these children dared to hope and dream of a day they would leave the ghetto and return to their normal lives. The adults who taught them hoped the same things. It makes it all the more difficult to take in when one reads the appendix where details are given of the outcomes for these children, the vast majority of whom perished at Auschwitz and other death camps. It makes their hope that much more poignant and breathtaking. Of the 15,000 children to dwell within its barbed wire fences, only 100 children walked out. I highly encourage anyone to read this account of the Holocaust, this true and touching monument to these children and their teachers.

Butterfly wings
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-22
Only three of the poets and authors whose work is represented in this volume survived the Nazi Holocaust.

These works, however, are no more dead than the wings of butterflies mounted in a natural history museum.

They fly: They give the children voices for all time---not just the authors and poets' voices, but the voices of all 14,900 children who perished in Terezin from the arrival of the first transport in November 1941 to the ghetto's liberation in April 1945. Indeed, voices for all 141,000 Jewish people transported here from Germany, Holland, Poland, Denmark, Luxembourg, Austria, Hungary, Czechoslovakia and elsewhere, including the relative handful---16,832---who survived.

The works here are a testament to the human spirit.

Insightful Book
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-15
As a school teacher, I found a wonderful use for this book in my classroom. My 6th grade history class studies the Holocaust and was participating in the Houston Holocaust Museum's Butterfly Project. This book helped my students understand some of the feelings and problems faced by children housed at Terezin Concentration Camp during WWII.

History
Infrastructure: A Field Guide to the Industrial Landscape
Published in Paperback by W. W. Norton (2006-09-18)
Author: Brian Hayes
List price: $35.00
New price: $21.81
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Average review score:

What a terrific resource
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-30
This book is a treasure. I am especially impressed with the strong reception it receives from some environmental activists, teachers and students I have shared it with.

I hope someone like Ken Burns will want to make it into a TV documentary.

Jack Malinowski
Phila. Pa.

Fantastic - learn about all that stuff around that you usually ignore.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-24
For me, this book brought a new level of fun to driving around. Another take on the many things that 'make civilized life possible.'

American version of how does everything work
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-20
A proviso that must be made is that this is a very-USA-centric book. No disrespect intended as it is a beautifully photographed and relatively detailed (plus references for a lot more information) tome. Just something to keep in mind as the world is not (yet?) flat in infrastructure.

I like to think of myself as pretty knowledgeable, but I learned quite a bit in each chapter. I can imagine a similar book for Infrastructure 1925 (or so). Would be fun to see what has been lost (trains/streetcars/twice-daily-mail delivery) and gained (more obvious).

Wonderful, eye-opening book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-10
This engrossing book leads the reader on a tour of industrial features that one would encounter on both a cross-country or cross-town trip. After reading this book, you will find yourself---as I did---pointing out industrial installations and explaining their use to friends and family.

The glossy, full-color pictures are the most striking feature of this large book. They superbly complement the already excellent, clear, and well-organized text. I was also particularly impressed by the further reading listed at the back of the book. It is organized by chapter and ranked from "Kids" to "Geeks". It filled my stack of reading for several weeks after I finished Infrastructure.

My only criticism of the book echoes the author's apology in the preface: there are many technologies and industries necessarily absent from the book. I can only hope that the author will produce further books of similar quality in the future.

nature guide for the artificial landscape
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-14
If you go for a walk and start actually looking around, you'll see a lot of things that most of us don't really understand -- power lines, sewer systems, the mysterious blue telephone junction boxes. This book explains why and what these things are -- think of it as a Nature Guide for the human-made environment. Do you have Sibley's Guide? Well, you should have one of these, too. My only quibble -- the pages are below standard quality for a hardback book. But never you mind -- don't be picky, like me! Get this book!

History
The Last Valley (Cassell Military Paperbacks)
Published in Paperback by Cassell military (2005-02-10)
Author: Martin Windrow
List price: $22.29
New price: $6.46
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Average review score:

5 stars for effort, but 2 stars for readability
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-25
I must say that the author did an excellent job if he intended this book to be a record of the day to day action on all theaters of engagement between the French and the Viet Minh.

Because of the excessive level of detail, the book is very diffcult to read and appreciate. It is a mind numbing experience.

Read this only if you wish to know in detail the horrible sufferings that that combatants on either side faced in a senseless war. Otherwise you will be better off with just a summary.



Great account, but French faults are downplayed
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-23
The Last Valley: Dien Bien Phu And the French Defeat in Vietnam

Apparently the best account ever written on Dien Bien Phu. Just two brief remarks:
1. History is shaped by strong personalities, and there was an abundance of them in Dien Bien Phu. Despite the book's large volume, there would be welcome a chapter sketching portraits of key protagonists (Bigeard, Langlais, de Castries etc), at the expense of details on arms specifications.
2.The author is favorably predisposed to French military leaders, and I tend to sustain his argument about injustices inflicted to the French army by politicians. Nevertheless, he is inclined to offer unnecessary excuses to the former, as well as to soothe down quarrels. Why not state bluntly that Cogny and Langlais could not tolerate Navarre and de Castries respectively? Even though the outcome might not be different, leadership exercised by de Castries was apparently inadequate. During this epic battle, besides heroism, mistakes had been made also on the French part, which the author appears quite eager to justify, out of respect to this unique effort.

The very best history of DBP ever written
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-24
T. E. Lawrence wrote that amateurs do something because they love to, and professionals because they must. We can thank the muses that Martin Windrow is a self-described amateur, because this work bears all the hallmarks of serious and loving craftsmanship. He places both the war, and the battle in context, he casts a glaring light upon some of its myths, and he gives serious attention to the technical aspects of the battle that the great majority of military professionals would otherwise miss, such as the state of Viet Minh artillery tactics and doctrine. Were Fall still alive and writing, Windrow would still have outclassed him. Anything and everything you want or need to know about the battle for Dien Bien Phu is here. The very best military history I've read in English in a very long time. Bravo!

simply excellent
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-21

the book just kind of grabbed me, twice.
first when i saw it on the library shelf, i read "hell in a very small place" many years ago and have a continuing interest in vietnam and america's involvement there.
the second time is when i started reading it, it reads like an excellent detective story, i sat and sat and finished it at one sitting, not a small feat considering it is over 700 pages long. This style is the first very notable characteristic.

not only is the writing excellent, but the author is one of those people who you can imagine talking to. he appears to a military historian from his amazon authors page. writing since the 1970's with an accent on french and the foreign legion. But this book looks like a long term research project and literally a work of love. the detail and interest he displays puts it in a class almost by itself. the only other military history that i've been this impressed by is the boer war by pakenham. The research and simply put love that went into this book is evident thoughout and is a second notable item.

there is something else that makes it outstanding, several places he shows some very unique and well thought out ideas. they are just snatches of his worldview: some pages about the wounds caused by military bullets, a couple of places where he talks about the relationships between politicians and military leaders, and his discussion about how men fight for their buddies next to them, not geopolitical big things. There are just a few of these rather tantilizing glimpses, enough to make me look for more of his books. This disclosure of the man behind the work and his ideas developed from a lifetime of study in history is remarkable and the 3rd item i wish to point out.

I'd not a fan of military histories, nor an i particularly interested in the genre. But i do like his writing. I find the careful analysis of what happened, what lead up to it, how people responded fascinating and as yesterday proved, somewhat addictive. There is an overwhelming number of names, who went where and fought whom, etc, those datum that make up military history, but it is not so bad that it bores or obscures the ideas. He is a very careful documenter of the facts, desirous of completeness and setting the historical record straight. All elements which appear strongly in the book.

There is another thing remarkable about the book and it's author, a desire to look at the facts and the events and truly learn from them. To see this part of our world, a somewhat dark one, filled with the dead and lost, and remember them not just for their sacrifices but what these things have to teach us about ourselves and the societies we find ourselves in. and the first place to find the meaning of events is to get them right, to be factual and see what happened and propose why. something that this book does in a uniquely interesting and useful way.

i sure wish the militaries of the world had more thoughtful people like this author, either in their general staffs or in their officer universities. perhaps a significant dose of reality and history is what more of our military leaders need before embarking on disastrous campaigns.

The Last Valley: Dien Bien Phu and the French Defeat in Vietnam
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-04
This is a superb and well constructed book and is by far one of the best accounts of the Battle of Dien Bien Phu that has been written. The author gives the reader a great insight to the formation of the Viet Minh and their rise to become a formidable fighting force whose journey to power led to the French defeat at Dien Bien Phu.

The book is well balanced and very readable. It gives a well presented account of the battle and how it unfolded and also shows how, although the French were defeated, at some stages of the fighting, victory could have gone either way with the staggering battle casualties suffered by the Viet Minh.

He also deals with the communist purges in the north after the French had been defeated and the division of the country into North and South Vietnam.

This fine book would not be out of place on the bookshelf of anyone interested in the military campaigns of Vietnam.

History
Legionnaire: An Englishman in the French Foreign Legion
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Pan Books (2003-02)
Author: Simon Murray
List price: $14.95
New price: $9.81
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Average review score:

The classic
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-08
No need to add any reviews, just the best british legion book. Plays
in the same league like "Par le sang verse'" (Through the blood wich was
shed) by Paul Bonnecarrere.

Could not put it down!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-28
For men who have served in a similar capacity (airborne infantry), great read. Easy to say now that I'm no longer eligible, but I wish I'd joined 20 years ago. It's the kind of adventure I was looking for then. Some of my personal experiences parallel Mr. Murray's, but not in intensity and duration. Deepest respect.

A classic story of the Legion
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-14
I greatly enjoyed Legionnaire, though it does bog down in places, it is a great telling of life in the Legion. The author is a very intelligent and educated man and it shows in his writing. The entire book is a collection from his extensive diaries during his time in the Legion.

The story is a classic Foreign Legion story of a young educated British boy seeking adventure and excitement. What he finds is that the Legion is not what he expected from reading Beau Geste and he is thrust into one of the most brutal and psychologically exhausting experience of his life. But you can see the transformation from the boy who entered the Legion to the hardened and weathered man who left it five years later.

Though the story might seem somewhat cliche the art is in the telling and the author does a magnificent job, a great read and well worth the time spent.

Classic Must Read Book of the Genre
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-27
I've read this book at least four times over the past twenty years (yes, I bought it when it first came out) and lent it out to at least that many friends. If you are interested in the Legion, the military, history or just feeling adventurous - this is the book for you.

A Great Book!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-05-25
I had the old version of the book and at first the pace is slow and the diary format wasn't exciting. Later on, the action picks up and I came to like Murray as he is a very good lad and makes me sympathize with him. It is a wonderful account of 5 years in such a tough environment, although I would never join the Legion unless I really messed myself up somewhere in life...the reasons not to join are plentiful and I'm not sure Murray had any good reason to join the Legion other than for adventure, at a time when youths could take time off and worry less about the rat-race as it is today.

History
Los Cuatro Acuerdos: Una Guia Practica para la Libertad Personal
Published in Paperback by Amber-Allen Publishing (1999-05-30)
Author: Don Miguel Ruiz
List price: $12.95
New price: $6.31
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Average review score:

Being honest about Amazon Service
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-01
One of the best books I have ever read. I did read that book long time ago but wanted my mother to read it. She found it very easy to read and she said that she finished the book so fast. I will recommend this book to younger people as older people. Anyone that will like to enlighten their lives....

Me siento en paz conmigo misma
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-19
Estoy atravezando una crisis en mi relacion el cual me ha hecho sentir culpable al mismo tiempo que me han culpado de todo lo que ha pasado. Pero este libro me ha demostrado que no es asi. Ahora siento una gran paz interior. Me ha hecho entender que nada de esto esta en mis manos, y que solo tengo que esperar a que el huracan pase y vuelva de nuevo la calma.

Exellent book.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-14
Helps free us mentally from the past. I started reading it and it's so true what has been past from our ancestors (grandparents, to our parents) affect our success in life and how we cope with our problems because of those believes.

I recommend it to anyone that it's feeling tied up in life, one who is fearful or anxious. It's a great book for those who are willing to be open minded, and wants to receive the best. One who wants to move up in life and enjoy it while forgiving those who we have held captive in our insecurities and gruges.

Must read and give as a gift. It's food for the mind, and easy to read.

It is a good book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-15
It is a good book about how you should act in your life. How our parents are doing what their parent do with them. It is good to read and try to put in practice.... It is dificult when you put in practice, but remember practice make the master!!

Fascinating!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-12
No words to describe the amazing content of this book.
A must! It changed my life.

History
My Life and Hard Times (Perennial Classics)
Published in Paperback by Harper Perennial Modern Classics (1999-10-01)
Author: James Thurber
List price: $11.00
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Average review score:

Talent Like This is Rare
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-25
Thurber's classic about growing up in Columbus, Ohio is laugh out loud funny, even 80 years removed. Talent like this is rare. He deserves his literary reputation.

My Life & Hard Times
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-08
James Thurber was one of the funiest authors of all time and this book cements his reputation. I enjoyed it many years ago and after re-reading it, I enjoyed it again.

Amusing introduction to beloved wit
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-23
Should be required reading for all folks of any age looking for an introduction to life in these United States, for those learning to overcome despair and disaster with humor and grace, for any and all learning the English language.

A fun Thurber book for all his fans
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-18
Thurber is a great favorite of mine, and this was another fun book to read.

An old, old fashioned read.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-24
Take your mind back half a century and read these mildly amusing essays about life in the 1920s and 1930s. The style is so different from modern prose, but it is well worth the read.

History
New York Yankees: An Interactive Guide to the World of Sports (Sports by the Numbers)
Published in Paperback by Savas Beatie (2008-09-01)
Authors: Daniel J. Brush, David Horne, and Marc CB Maxwell
List price: $16.95
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Average review score:

NY Yankees - Sports by the numbers
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-21
This is a fantastic book for all sports fans whether you are a
Yankees fan or not. It contains a tremendous amount of facts, stories and statistics all melded together in a very enjoyable and entertaining format.
No matter how much you know about baseball or the Yankees you will
learn much from the detailed research that went into this fun book.
This book is a must for all baseball fans.

Fans of Don Mattingly
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-17
Don Mattingly is my all-time favorite Yankee, and I was glad to see that he got his own chapter intro in this book that offers a unique look at the history of the Bronx Bombers. All of the Hit Man's best numbers can be found in this book.

Well now, it's a series -- great idea
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-17
I'm the guy with a signed copy of the OU book, and by signed I mean by all three authors and Coach Stoops himself. So the only disappointment I had about the Yankees book is that, well, when I got it there were no signatures -- but I have to say, each book in this series seems to be getting better and better, and this Yankees book was fantastic. I'm an old man, to tell you the truth, and I remember when Mantle and Murcer and guys like Bench (yeah he was a Red but so what) came through here -- this part of the country bleeds for the Sooners, but we love our Yankees too. I have read a lot of books on both OU and the Yankees -- easily of the ones out right now these are my favorite, and I highly recommend anyone looking for holiday gifts to OU or Yankees fans to consider these items.

ARod is an overpaid slugger, but this book is a great value.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-17
I live in Athens and so those of us who are Yankees fans (of which I am one) usually keep it to ourselves. The past couple of years weren't so bad, with Atlanta really struggling -- but when the Braves were in the mix every year it was tough wearing pinstripes around here. With that said, I love this book. I love the unique format, of having 1,000 stories that correlate to 1,000 numbers -- usually in an obvious way, but often in some quirky or creative or mindboggling fashion as well. And I esepcially loved the chapter on Thurman Munson -- RIP Captain -- you are still loved and missed today. This is not your typically history book -- this is a fun sports history book. I pretty much guarantee you that if you have an obscure Yankee player in mind, you will still find him in this book -- and without question you will be absorbed by the amount of knowledge that went into telling the stories of the many legends: Ruth, Gehrig, Lazzeri, DiMaggio, Mantle, and on and on they go . . . I love this book. And I highly recommend it to anyone who wants to read a great baseball book, Yankees or otherwise.

Numbers Junkies
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-17
This book proclaims that Yankee fans are "numbers junkies" because they boast 26 World Series titles and a host of other prominent numbers that are important not only to NYY history, but to baseball history in general -- and I happen to agree with the authors. I'm a baseball fan who tolerates NY most of the time, but I found this book to be very entertaining and the numbers, stories, and profiles of Yankee legends in this book were well worth reading. If you are not a Yankees fan you still have to admit that the Yankees' history and the history of baseball cannot be separated, which makes this book a must-read for anyone who likes to talk baseball stats and numbers.

History
The Night Lives on
Published in Hardcover by William Morrow & Co (1986-08)
Author: Walter Lord
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Average review score:

Questions finally meet their answers
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-09
Being a fan of Walter Lord's impeccably researched book "A Night to Remember," I was instantly intrigued upon learning of "The Night Lives On." I had had several lingering questions for years: why was an order given to turn the ship starboard when the iceberg eventually hit starboard? How, specifically, was the matter of the Californian's involvement dealt with? Which theories about "the gash" don't pan out? All of my questions and more were painstakingly answered as if I had asked Mr. Lord for an explanation myself. His ingenius weaving of history, statistics, personal testimonies, and logic, blended into an easily understandable format, made my love of the Titanic's story grow even more. Anyone can buy one book and know the generalities of the ship. But this book goes above and beyond to educate those already acquainted with the story and wanting a much more in-depth look.

NIGHT LIVES ON
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-12-28
WALTER LORD DOES IT AGAIN. HE BRINGS IT ALL TO LIFE. A MUST HAVE FOR ALL "TITANIC" FANS!

A Fascinating Listen for a Long Trip
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-25
I picked up this audiocasette due to curiosity. The information packed tape was interesting, and even made me angry because this tragedy did not have to happen. Like people say, most tragedies are a string of unfortunate events coming together at the same time. I don't think the sinking of this liner is anything different. It gives a glimpse into the technological limitations of the day, the caste system of the gilded age, and the prevailing seaman's attitude of the time. After listening to this (and reading The Perfect Storm), my interest was certainly piqued. I ordered some books on the Titanic and the SS Edmund Fitzgerald, and can't wait until they get here.

Mysteries explained about the Titanic.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-14
Walter Lord follows up his best seller of the fifties-A Night to Remember--with this eighties version on some mysteries about the sunken liner. One learns about the musicians (two groups actually) and what they played that night while the life boats were being loaded. Another story details the negligence of the freighter Californian for not answering the eight rockets of distress from the Titanic. Another story details the shootings and suicide near the end of the launch of the last life boats. Still another story details why there were not enough life boats on the Titanic and most other ocean liners of the day. Walter Lord clears the air about these mysteries with his well informed writing.
If you want to know more about the Titanic, read both Lord's books on the subject (A Night to Remember, The Night Lives On). They will help the reader understand this tragedy. I have seen the movie and I know the producers consulted these books when they made the movie.

Updated information to supplement _A Night to Remember_
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-25
Calling this 'the sequel to _A Night to Remember_' is slightly misleading. Rather than the storytelling style employed to relate the story of the sinking of the Titanic, this is almost a collection of 17 1-chapter essays about various points of the disaster. Excellent stuff, but if you were expecting, say, the story of the Congressional and Parliamentary investigations of the disaster, you need to look elsewhere, e.g. Wyn Craig Wade's _The Titanic: End of a Dream_.

"Unsinkable Subject" - Overview of the popular fascination with Titanic.

"What's in a Name?" - The actual launching of Titanic from Harland & Wolff's shipyards.

"Legendary from the Start" - Titanic was indeed popularly supposed to be unsinkable, but the trend of sacrificing safety features for competitiveness had actually taken hold during her design.

"Had Ships Gotten Too Big for Captain Smith?" - Explores Smith's record, including a near-collision in harbor with Titanic's sister ship, the Olympic.

"Our Coterie" - The group of first class passengers, including Col. Gracie, mentioned in _A Night to Remember_.

"Everything Was Against Us" - Contrasts the ice warnings, lack of coordination between radio room & bridge, and lookouts, with the notion that the accident was a one-in-a-million chance.

"The Gash" - The collision itself.

"I Was Very Soft the Day I Signed That" - How and why ships the size of Titanic could legally sail while carrying so few lifeboats.

"What Happened to the Goodwins?" - Facts and figures about 1st class vs. 3rd, contrasting White Star's implication that those people down there couldn't understand English, with the Goodwin family (an electrical engineer and his family, emigrating from London to New York, all of whom were lost, including the 6-year-old).

"Shots in the Dark" - Explores the stories about Murdoch, one of the officers loading the lifeboats, and whether shots were fired.

"The Sound of Music" - An in-depth look at the "Nearer My God to Thee" myth, and the 2 bands on the Titanic. (I was aggravated to learn that that entire, touching sequence with the cornet in _Raise the Titanic!_, which I loved as a kid, was made up from whole cloth - the musicians were just as courageous as the movie made them out to be, but no cornet players.) And if you're a professional musician who thinks *your* agent is heartless, wait till you read this.

"She's Gone" - Compares the eyewitness accounts of Titanic's last moments with what we now know.

"The Electric Spark" Captain Rostron of the Carpathia, who picked up the survivors at great personal risk.

"A Certain Amount of Slackness" Discussion of Captain Lord (no relation to the author) of the Californian, in sharp contrast to the preceding chapter.

"Second-guessing" - The inquiries and subsequent litigation (Lord's treatment of Senator Smith should be contrasted with Wade's more detailed treatment, but then Wade has a whole book to play with).

"Why Was Craganour Disqualified?" What happened to some of the survivors. (Craganour, owned by a member of the Ismay family, was disqualified from winning a major British horse race.)

"Unlocking the Ocean's Secret" - The search for the Titanic, leading up to Robert Ballard's successful attempt in 1985 (written before others began plundering the ship for relics).

History
Operation Buffalo: USMC Fight for the DMZ
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Dell (1992-12-01)
Author: Keith W. Nolan
List price: $6.50
New price: $21.11
Used price: $19.77

Average review score:

Love and Hate
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-30
This is a must have book for your library. After over 30 years you forget why you hated Vietnam until you read a book that brings back all the memories. This is such a book. I served with 1/1 and 3/1 after these battles and am amazed that keith Nolan is able to bring to life what it meant to serve in a Marine Corps Infantry Bn in Vietnam. I got angry, I laughed and I cried as I read this book. At times I felt like I could reach out and touch some of the people, the writing was so vivid. Everyone should read this book and remember what the Marines paid in blood for that war. THANK YOU USMC for what you gave me and THANK YOU Marines all over the world protecting us now.

Operation Buffalo: USMC Fight for the DMZ
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-05
This is one of the best combat depictions of the Viet Nam War that I have ever read. I highly recommend it for former military readers.

My friends were there...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-21
My friend Beetle was there. Lee Burns was there. Others were there. Nolan writes almost as if HE were there. It happened before I got in-country, but it was a legendary fight by legendary Marines and Nolan tells the story so very well. I am proud to have helped carry these Marines in my helicopters and supported them in every way possible. They are heroes in the truest sense of that so misused word. This book is an EXCELLENT read!

The most intense book I've ever read.....
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-12
Keith Nolan has managed to capture the absolute confusion and fear associated with modern combat in Operation Buffalo. I started this book in 1997 or there abouts and was unable to finish it. As a former Marine who was in boot camp in San Diego when this operation took place I had a difficult time with the content. Lose an entire company of Marines to a sly enemy? Impossible. And then to read about the loss of additional Marines in trying to recover the dead and wounded (something that is very important by the way) that had fallen the day before....difficult. I just couldn't finish the book.

Well, I picked it up again, after ten years, and read it completely. In a very belated way I have to compliment Mr. Nolan on not only his ability to tell a difficult story, but to tell it in a way that makes sense and then manages to touch the heart. As another reviewer stated, Operation Buffalo hurts the heart of the reader and this reflects the sensitivity that the author weaved into his tale.

The doctrine at the time was that the Marines divided an area in to map grids. The Marines would sweep a grid with a company, clear it, and then move on. The NVA would wait for the Marines to leave and then move into that grid knowing that they were probably safe for a while. The battle that took place in July of 1967 is the result of the Marines out smarting themselves. They decided to sweep the same map grid twice, trying to catch the NVA off guard. It worked. But a single company was no match for what the Marines stepped into.

The American fighting man has been depicted in less than a glowing manner in Viet Nam. Brutal, drug crazed killers. I think while some of that may be deserved, the bulk of that criticism is undeserved and is served up by people who have never humped a pack or shared water out of a canteen. Nolan does a huge service for the Viet Nam vets by explaining the sheer meaness of the NVA in how our wounded were treated. Well done.

Operation Buffalo isn't a book for the weak of heart or for those who don't really want to be informed. It is a book that speaks well to the commitment of American fighting men in general and of U. S. Marines in particular.

Semper Fi.

Essential military history of the Vietnam war
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-02-16
This is as terrifying an account of the Vietnam war as I've ever read. Forget the melodrama and sensationalism that characterized much of Vietnam war literature in the early and mid-eighties: Nolan's sparse style and clear representation of what took place on the DMZ in the summer of 1967 will give you nightmares. Don't look to find refuge here in a simple war story: Nolan tenaciously presents history as it unfolds.


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