Halifax Tar
Army.ca Fixture
- Reaction score
- 11,368
- Points
- 1,260
For Christmas I received:
Starship Troopers
12 Rules For life
and
Right Here Right Now
Starship Troopers
12 Rules For life
and
Right Here Right Now
FJAG said:About a quarter of the way through Seth Abramson's Proof of Collusion: How Trump Betrayed America.
https://www.amazon.ca/Proof-Collusion-Trump-Betrayed-America/dp/1982116080/
It's a hard slog even for someone like me who is convinced there was collusion, naivete and stupidity in the Trump campaign. It's not really what I'd call a well and deeply developed book. It's more in the nature of a compendium of all natures of news and journal articles and interviews by others which have been cobbled together into a narrative of some type or other.
I'm just starting the fourth chapter and have so far found that numbers one through three have been somewhat of a deja vu with numerous facts and pieces having been repeated several times (not necessarily verbatim but sometimes so)
I'm going to keep pushing on. Almost all the reviews on Amazon are five stars and start with the phrase "well written book" so I must be missing something.
:cheers:
I just finished reading Hunter Killer and am about to start Deep War. Some interesting outcomes... The conversion of bulk cargo carriers to aviation platforms (and supply ships ) is already well underway.Rifleman62 said:Currently reading this series of the modern US Navy. Have read all his Dan Lenson books. Just starting ONSLAUGHT. Poyer does a fair bit of research for his books as detailed in the Acknowledgments.
Author: David Poyer’s active (Annapolis 1971) and reserve naval service included sea duty in the Atlantic, Mediterranean, Arctic, Caribbean, and Pacific, and shore duty at the Pentagon, Surface Warfare Development Group, Joint Forces Command, and in Saudi Arabia and Bahrain. He retired from the Joint Forces Command as a captain, with the Defense Superior Service Medal as his highest award.
Modern Navy Series
The stories and memories of those who lived through the Second World War in Newfoundland.
In January 1941, the hulking twenty-one thousand ton troopship Edmund B. Alexander docked in St John's harbor, carrying a thousand American soldiers sent to join the thousands of Canadian troops protecting Newfoundland against attack by Germany. France had fallen, Great Britain was fighting for its survival, and Newfoundland - then a dominion of Britain - was North America's first line of defence. Although the German invasion never came, St John's found itself occupied by both Allied Canadian and American forces.
Occupied St John's reveals the profound impact that the war years had on the city's inhabitants, thrown into a conflict where the "home front" was also the "war front." Weaving together interviews with residents who lived through the upheaval as well as archival material, this collection reconstructs the memories of people coping with extraordinary circumstances.
Lavishly illustrated and engagingly written, Occupied St John's is a remarkable look at the effects of the Second World War on the city, opening another chapter in Newfoundland's fascinating history.
Blackadder1916 said:Have been going through Occupied St John's: A Social History of a City at War, 1939-1945 by Steven High (Editor)
The most deadly structural fire in what is now Canada consumed the Knights of Columbus hostel in St. John's, Newfoundland, on 12 December 1942. An arsonist set fire to the building when it was packed with military personnel and their companions. The hostel was a firetrap; doors opened inward, exits were restricted and there was no emergency lighting system. Within five minutes, 99 people had been burned to death and 100 seriously injured. The main fire station was only 180 m away, but the building was doomed before the engines arrived.
https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/fire-disasters
Retired AF Guy said:Just finished Anthony Beevor's "Ardennes 1944: The Battle for the Bulge" and just started his "The Battle of Arnhem: The Deadliest Airborne Operation of WWII." As always with his books chock full of interesting facts; from the poor grunt (allied and German) in the trenches to the highest levels of command. For example, while reading the Arnhem book learned how the Brit Para's ended up using maroon for the colour of their berets.