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If you likes The Price of Glory, YOu may like A savage War for PEace also by Horne ist is about Algiers also Dennis Winters Deathsmen I think thats the title is a great read I just finished THe Last Season about Gary Magneson a back coutry Ranger for the NOS that disapeared |
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Starting "Not A Good Day To Die" by Sean Naylor
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Congrats 2LT Daniel, USMA '07
RIP Ssg. Johnnie V. Mason; 717 Ord. Co. (EOD) - KIA O.I.F. Dec. 19, 2005 "I draw down on myself..then scratch my ass" RazorHKUSP45 Proud member: Ranstad's Militia - "The Fantastic Bastards" |
"American Spartans The U.S. Marines: A Combat History from Iwo Jima to Iraq"
Its a great read, I've learned a lot. For example, did you know that the Marine Corps were the first to pioneer using helicopters to insert troops? I didn't. |
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Just finished Hell on Belle Isle. It's the diary of J. Osborn Coburn of Co. I, 6th Michigan, who was captured in Charleston, Virginia and incarcerated at Belle Isle in Richmond, Virginia. Cheerful and confident that he would be paroled, Coburn dies of starvation on Belle Isle and never marries the girl to whom he was engaged. His diary was returned to his father by the hospital steward who attended to him on his last days. It's all too common a story of an American PoW (either Union or Confederate) during 1864 when the exchange policy was largely abandoned (except in the case of the very sick and near dead).
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Just starting the "Foundations of Freedom." Wilder Publications
A collection of: "Common Sense" "The Declaration of Independence" "The Articles of Confederation" "The Federalist Papers" and " The US Constitution" all in one book! Still Learning |
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It may cost you a lot, to do the right thing, but sleep will come easy.
NRA Life Member |
Most recently, “Carnage and Culture”, basically a rebuttal to “Guns, Germs and Steel.” It is an excellent read. And a very good rebuttal to Jared Diamond's work..
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Night Probe by Clive Cussler
Dirk Pitt novels are always a good read. |
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To the Sound of Musketry and Tap of the Drum. It's the Civil War letters of Harry Bartlett, Battery D, 1st Michigan Light Infantry. Bartlett was an artificier, equivalent to a technician in today's army. Artificiers included furriers, blacksmiths, carpenters, wheelwrights, saddlemakers, shoemakers and harness makers like Bartlett. His unit served with George Thomas whose division arrived too late for Shiloh. They were with Thomas when he advanced on Corinth, Mississippi and later with Rosecrans at Murfreesboro where they were sent to stop Wheeler's cavalry which was raiding the wagon train (and thankfully missed the bloodbath at Murfreesboro). They lost most of their guns at Chickamauga (5 out of 6) and were reequipped at Chattanooga during the siege.
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I am now reading Cocaine an Unauthorized Biography. It gives a great look into the early history of coca leaves thus far, and explores the first users of cocaine thoroughly.
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"and one more thing, dear Lord, about our enemies, ignore their heathen prayers and help us blow those little bastards straight to Hell. Amen"
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I just got out of college....no more boring books I have to force myself to read! Wo0t!
Right now: Two Sides of the Moon: Our Story of the Cold War Space Race ETA: That was a damn good book! On deck: Nixon and Kissinger: Partners in Power |
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RichardNixon2008
All your children are poor unfortunate victims of systems beyond their control. |
Year of the Hangman by Glenn F. Williams. It's about the expedition ordered by Washington against the Six Nations. Washington was tired of the Indian/Tory raids in New York and ordered General Sullivan not only to march through their territory but to destroy it. He burned towns, destroyed crops and wrought wholesale destruction that drove many Indians to starvation. War is Hell.
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Just finished J.H. Elliott's "Empires of the Atlantic World."
Halfway through Richard Rhodes's "The Making of the Atomic Bomb." I'll probably read his "Dark Sun" next. After that, probably back to the XVIIth century. |
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Just finished "On Call In Hell" - CDR Richard Jadick - about the battalion surgeon who traveled into Falluja during Operation Phantom Furry to set up a forward aid station in the middle of the battle. It was awesome and a quick read (only about 250 pages).
Also just finished Michael Yon's "Moment of Truth in Iraq". Equally good. |
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West Virginia University - AKA - New Jersey Out of State University - Alumni.
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China Marine: An Infantryman's Life after World War II
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Rereading "The Killer Angels" by Michael Shaara.
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If you put in a call to 911 of man with a gun, then go stand in your front yard with a gun you might be a redneck. - SGB
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"Buck" Compton, Call of Duty
eta: done. good read |
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"and one more thing, dear Lord, about our enemies, ignore their heathen prayers and help us blow those little bastards straight to Hell. Amen"
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Just started reading Reclaiming History by Vincent Bugliosi. So far I've read 181 of the 1489 pages.
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Well let me just quote the late, great Colonel Sanders, who said..."I'm too drunk...to taste this chicken."
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Just finished "Mig Pilot: The Final Escape of Lt. Belenko"
Fascinating account of what life was like in the Soviet Union during the 50s/60s/early 70's. I had no idea those people lived like that. Made the think the whole time I was reading how lucky I was to be born here; that is the greatest gift ever bestowed on me. |
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RichardNixon2008
All your children are poor unfortunate victims of systems beyond their control. |
Just finished Gettysburg: The First Day - Harry Pfanz and am currently reading Panzer Leader - Heinz Guderian. On deck is, 1776 - David McCullough.
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Unintended Consequences
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I'm reading a signed copy of Beyond the Rhine by Donald R. Burgett,
I have already own and have read Currahee!, Seven Roads to Hell. All I am missing is The Road to Arnhem. These are great books and would recommend them to anyone. I picked this book to read for my US military History Class in college: With the Old Breed: At Peleliu and Okinawa by E. B. Sledge |
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I read Panzer Leader while I was in college, good book. |
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almost done with Easy company soldier by Don Malarkey.
another good read |
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"and one more thing, dear Lord, about our enemies, ignore their heathen prayers and help us blow those little bastards straight to Hell. Amen"
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I had to read that for my US mil history in college too! Hell of a book, really made me all the more pissed off that the Marines are giving Oki back to Japan. Sonofabitch Japs should be the ones moving all their people off that island, not us. |
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RichardNixon2008
All your children are poor unfortunate victims of systems beyond their control. |
Just started Better to Beg Forgivness by Michael Z. Williamson.
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Right now I'm reading, Nothing Like It In the World : The Men Who Built the Transcontinental Railroad 1863-1869 by Stephen Ambrose. Almost done, awesome so far.
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"With the Old Breed" Excellent book.
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The Hour of Our Nation's Agony: The Civil War Letters of Lt. William Cowper Nelson of Mississippi. About 1/3rd the way through right now. Typical sybil wa-oh soljer stuff so far. Lots of drill, lots of picketing, lots of labor.
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"This Man's Army" by Andrew Exum
CPT Exum is a Chattanooga native who graduated from U Penn's ROTC program and was commissioned an Infantry officer. Following Ranger School, he was assigned to the 10th Mountain Division, at Ft. Drum, NY. CPT Exum deployed to Afghanistan and Iraq, before leaving the service. |
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NRA Pistol Instructor / TN Handgun Carry Permit Instructor
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As a history major I HAVE to read allot of books but between classes I am reading:
40 ways to Look at Winston Churchill Masters of Chaos The Decline and Fall of the roman Empire (6 vols) The American Way of War British Imperialism The Rise and Fall of the British Empire |
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Terry Texas Ranger Trilogy
good read about Terry's Texas Rangers of Civil War fame, pretty good, its three sets of memoirs of three members of the unit. As part of the Army of the Tennessee they were under the command of Nathan Bedford Forrest and Joe Wheeler( come on we got them damn yankees on the run) |
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If guns kill then silverware makes people fat
(S)Sgt USAF 2A551J C-130 Crew Chief |
Beamy - Years ago I bought the hardback version from the Texas Ranger Museum in Waco. It was a good read, but not useful for my research.
Just finished reading The Rescue by Steven Smith. It's about the Americans trapped behind Japanese lines in Cebu (Phillipines) during WW II and their rescue by the American submarine Carvalla. Smith did excellent research and The Rescue is a page turner. I'm now reading Count Zinzendorf and The Indians 1742. If you want a 18th Century European's look at the Indians (some of which is misinformed), this is the book to read. |
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Hunter-Killer. It's about the jeep carriers (CVEs) and their war against the U-boats.
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Masters of Chaos
Some parts aren't too bad, but much of it reads like an essay. |
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Just finished My Father's Secret War by Lucinda Franks. Tom Franks was in the Bureau of Ordnance and helped set up radar stations in the Pacific (often on an island just stormed by the Marines) which helped detect Japanese airplane movements and could direct fighter interceptors. He was also sent to assist SOE in Sweden where they worked on smuggling ball bearings from Sweden to England. In Europe, Franks broke into Gestapo HQ to learn the names of wanted individuals and was interrupted by a German sergeant. He killed the sergeant. Franks was also one of the first to enter a concentration camp and wrote a report which helped convince Eisenhower to visit the camps. Franks kept his secret past from his family and his daughter used her skills as a journalist to pry it out from him. It's an exciting read for anyone interested in cloak 'n dagger operations or research.
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Didn't even know Band of Brothers was a book, I'll have to check that out. Anyway I just finished 'With the Old Breed' by E. B. Sledge, awesome first hand account of the battles at Peleliu and Okinawa during WWII. Just started 'The Revolution A Manifesto' by Ron Paul and so far it is great.
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Eastward to Tartary
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Just finished Quest For A Star about General Francis Sherman.
History of the 124th Regiment of New York State Volunteers. It's a reprint of a Civil War regimental history. |
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Bible.
Rubicon - Tom Holland The third Reich in Power - Richard Evans |
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Terror at Beslan by John Giduck
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Hated that book. Self-promoting drivel with almost no useful information. |
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If you put in a call to 911 of man with a gun, then go stand in your front yard with a gun you might be a redneck. - SGB
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I felt the same way about Lone Survivor---------Luttrell came off as a pompous ass. I'm only about 1/3 of the way in on Terror but I can kinda see your point on the self-promoting part already... |
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See how many time he uses a phrase similar to "training like we conduct at Archangel."
His book supposedly is great because it has tons of info the media didn't have. OK, great, but NONE of it was useful from a tactical knowledge standpoint. Most of it was just what unit's were there, which I guess matters to someone like the duck who gets a fucking woody over Russian special forces. His solutions to the tactical problems caused by a terrorist attack on a school are laughable and almost childish. Oddly enough, the LE community seems to lap his vomit up. On top of that, whoever his editor was needs to be fired. A book thats supposed to teach a lesson and inform should have an order and flow to the information. That thing reads like the random thoughts of a meth-head. No particular order and you hear the same shit over and over. Maybe that was intentional filler. |
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If you put in a call to 911 of man with a gun, then go stand in your front yard with a gun you might be a redneck. - SGB
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The Union Must Stand: The Civil War Diary of John Quincy Adams Campbell, Fifth Iowa Volunteer Infantry. It's from the Univ. of Tenn series, Voices of the Civil War. The UoT concentrates on soldiers who served in the midwest and trans-Mississippi region. That region was neglected for years by scholars who suffered from VD (Virginia Disease - if it didn't happen in Virginia or didn't involve Bobby Lee, it wasn't worth reading about).
Campbell began as sergeant in one of the first regiments to respond to Lincoln's call to defend the Union and its form of republican government. Remember that until then, all other democratic governments had failed including that of the French Revolution. There were many revolutions in early 19th Century Europe which the ruling monarchies managed to suppress. The failed 1848 revolution led to the large influx of Germans to America. Hence, America was seen by many Americans as unique and to allow the Confederacy to secede would mean the failure of the noble experiment and the failure of democracy itself. Campbell felt this way and unlike many other soldiers, was also an abolitionist. His regiment was at Island No. 10 which, when captured, opened New Madrid (Misery) for capture. They fight under Rosecrans at Iuka where the Confederates under Sterling Price are defeated. As part of the encircling army of Grant, they help capture Pemberton and the garrison of Vicksburg. Afterwards the Fifth Iowa is part of the Army of Tennessee and marches as part of Sherman's Army to relieve Chattanooga. They're whipped badly at Tunnel Hill by Cleburne and Campbell has some harsh words for Sherman. After Bragg retreats from Missionary Ridge, they join in the pursuit towards Atlanta. I can't tell you guys what happens after that. I'm not that fast of a reader. |
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Yesterday (7/6) I started A Yankee at Arms.
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Landing Page Optimization: The Definitive Guide to Testing and Tuning for Conversions
& Meatball Sundae: Is Your Marketing Out of Sync? |
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I joined for the BOTD!!!!!
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The Boys from Rockville: Civil War Narratives of Sgt. Benjamin Hirst, Company D, 14th Connecticut Volunteers.
The editor, Robert Bee, has a PhD in anthropology and if you're interested in an analysis of Hirst's views through an anthropologist, this book will be most enlightening. He addresses the mindset of people of the period, their relation with their employers and with different races, the function of the military unit within that context and how the whole shebang goes together. It would be very useful for a reenactor who is trying to interpret a person of that period. Oh, by the way, Hirst's letters published in the papers as well as his personal letters and journal entries are included. You'll read about Hirst's daily life as a soldier (drill, drill and more drill), long marches, sleeping in mud and of course, the occasional battle including Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, Gettysburg. At Gettysburg, they are in the middle of the II Corps and were the men who stormed the Bliss Barn (and burned it) before the Pickett/Pettigrew/Trimble charge. They captured five flags (WOW) and spend the next day picking up guns and burying the dead. Hirst survived the war, but I'm 38 pages short of finishing it. |
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Marine Sniper......again
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They call me Cleto, Cleto Martino.
"Are there Sheep in it?"- Cowboy BamaShooter: It's not like the preacher is going to reveal anything new this year. |
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