Hotschi
Posts: 548
Joined: 1/18/2010 From: Austria Status: offline
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So you got Toland's Rising Sun, i.e. the Pacific War from the Japanese point of view. You might try John Costello, The Pacific War - same as above but from the British point of view... or Ronald Spector, Eagle Against The Sun - same as above but from the American perspective (my current read). 2 books by Gordon W. Prange, At Dawn We Slept and Pearl Harbor - The Verdict of History are both about the prelude to the actual attack. Clay Blair Jr., Silent Victory - about the U.S. submarine campaign... Eric Bergerund, Touched With Fire - about the land war in the Solomon/New Guinea area. This book I'd highly recommend. It's less a history book per se but deals more with how they fought, the weapons and tactics both sides used, the terrain they had to fight in, the diseases, etc etc. It even mentiones the.... troubles the involved soldiers had with simple questions on how to... defecate in battlefield conditions. This book is a real eye-opener, especially for people - like me - without any military background. If you want to get some idea what it is like to fight in the jungle, get this book. Richard B. Frank, Guadalcanal - in my opinion the best book about Guadalcanal, as it deals with all three aspects of the campaign, land, air, and naval warfare. John Prados, Combined Fleet Decoded - as the title says, about the impact of code-breaking by the Allied side.
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"A big butcher's bill is not necessarily evidence of good tactics" - Wavell's reply to Churchill, after the latter complained about faint-heartedness, as he discovered that British casualties in the evacuation from Somaliland had been only 260 men.
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