Matrix Games Forums

Forums  Register  Login  Photo Gallery  Member List  Search  Calendars  FAQ 

My Profile  Inbox  Address Book  My Subscription  My Forums  Log Out

RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment?

 
View related threads: (in this forum | in all forums)

Logged in as: Guest
Users viewing this topic: none
  Printable Version
All Forums >> [General] >> General Discussion >> RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment? Page: <<   < prev  49 50 [51] 52 53   next >   >>
Login
Message << Older Topic   Newer Topic >>
RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment? - 3/4/2015 8:21:27 PM   
Hotschi


Posts: 548
Joined: 1/18/2010
From: Austria
Status: offline
Thank you, warspite1, this is a impressive as well as a extremely useful list of titles.

_____________________________

"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.

(in reply to warspite1)
Post #: 1501
RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment? - 3/4/2015 8:51:19 PM   
berto


Posts: 20708
Joined: 3/13/2002
From: metro Chicago, Illinois, USA
Status: offline

Six Days of War: June 1967 and the Making of the Modern Middle East, by Michael B. Oren, Presidio Press, 2003.

_____________________________

Campaign Series Legion https://cslegion.com/
Campaign Series Lead Coder https://www.matrixgames.com/forums/tt.asp?forumid=1515
Panzer Campaigns, Panzer Battles, Civil War Battles Lead Coder https://wargameds.com

(in reply to Hotschi)
Post #: 1502
RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment? - 3/4/2015 10:09:56 PM   
Rodwonder

 

Posts: 193
Joined: 12/7/2013
Status: offline
At the moment- The Early Morning of War, Bull Run 1861 by Edward G. Longacre... Also I would like to thank Warspite1 for the suggestion of Hitler's U-Boat War. My two volumes just came in the mail. Thanks!

(in reply to berto)
Post #: 1503
RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment? - 3/7/2015 5:36:59 PM   
Hotschi


Posts: 548
Joined: 1/18/2010
From: Austria
Status: offline
Finished Edward Young's One of our Submarines, good book about Young's Service in various RN submarines, most notably in HMS Storm.

Now on to the next Royal Navy submarine book, this time not written by the skipper himself but by a 3rd person, Ian Trenowden, The Hunting Submarine: The Fighting Life of HMS Tally-Ho. This one, a T-Class submarine, saw service in the Far East, commanded by Leslie Bennington throughout its wartime commission. Tally-Ho was the most successful British submarine in the Macassar Strait, accounting for 20 percent of all RN submarine sinkings in this area.

_____________________________

"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.

(in reply to Rodwonder)
Post #: 1504
RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment? - 3/7/2015 6:24:48 PM   
warspite1


Posts: 41353
Joined: 2/2/2008
From: England
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Hotschi

Finished Edward Young's One of our Submarines, good book about Young's Service in various RN submarines, most notably in HMS Storm.

Now on to the next Royal Navy submarine book, this time not written by the skipper himself but by a 3rd person, Ian Trenowden, The Hunting Submarine: The Fighting Life of HMS Tally-Ho. This one, a T-Class submarine, saw service in the Far East, commanded by Leslie Bennington throughout its wartime commission. Tally-Ho was the most successful British submarine in the Macassar Strait, accounting for 20 percent of all RN submarine sinkings in this area.
warspite1

If you are into submarines at the moment then you could do worse than;

GAMP VC (Brian Izzard - Haynes)

This is the story of Commander Anthony Miers VC and is a really good read.

Recommended.


_____________________________

England expects that every man will do his duty. Horatio Nelson October 1805



(in reply to Hotschi)
Post #: 1505
RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment? - 3/7/2015 6:52:48 PM   
Hotschi


Posts: 548
Joined: 1/18/2010
From: Austria
Status: offline
Thanks again, have put it on my list - and yes, currently I am into everything available about Royal Navy submarines. For me, a very interesting topic. You can get so much about German boats and the Atlantic Battle, but on the other hand, books about submarine operations of Allied navies are very hard to find (except the USN of course).

_____________________________

"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.

(in reply to warspite1)
Post #: 1506
RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment? - 3/7/2015 6:59:02 PM   
Hotschi


Posts: 548
Joined: 1/18/2010
From: Austria
Status: offline
Just found something interesting too, but not exclusively RN; Jean Hood, Submarine: An Anthology of First-hand Accounts of the War Under the Sea, 1939-45 ... Now THAT is something!

_____________________________

"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.

(in reply to Hotschi)
Post #: 1507
RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment? - 3/8/2015 12:30:44 AM   
rhondabrwn


Posts: 2570
Joined: 9/29/2004
From: Snowflake, Arizona
Status: offline
I am thrilled! Today I got notification from Amazon that one of my most favorite "out of print" series is now available as a Kindle e-book. I read them three decades ago by checking them out of the library rather than purchasing them. I've never gotten the story out of my mind and wanted to do a re-read, but it wasn't available :( So this is great news AND it's free to read with my Amazon Unlimited subscription!

The author is Julian May and the series of four books is called "The Saga of Pliocene Exile". The first book is "The Many Colored Land" and the remaining three novels are also available plus a "companion" book. Here is a brief description of the first novel.

"In the year 2034, Theo Quderian, a French physicist, made an amusing but impractical discovery: the means to use a one-way, fixed-focus time warp that opened into a place in the Rhone River valley during the idyllic Pliocene Epoch, six million years ago. But, as time went on, a certain usefulness developed. The misfits and mavericks of the future—many of them brilliant people—began to seek this exit door to a mysterious past. In 2110, a particularly strange and interesting group was preparing to make the journey—a starship captain, a girl athlete, a paleontologist, a woman priest, and others who had reason to flee the technological perfection of twenty-second-century life.

Thus begins this dazzling fantasy novel that invites comparisons with the work of J.R.R. Tolkien, Arthur C. Clarke, and Ursula Le Quin. It opens up a whole world of wonder, not in far-flung galaxies but in our own distant past on Earth—a world that will captivate not only science-fiction and fantasy fans but also those who enjoy literate thrillers.
The group that passes through the time-portal finds an unforeseen strangeness on the other side. Far from being uninhabited, Pliocene Europe is the home of two warring races from another planet. There is the knightly race of the Tanu—handsome, arrogant, and possessing vast powers of psychokinesis and telepathy. And there is the outcast race of Firvulag—dwarfish, malev-o olent, and gifted with their own supernormal skills. Taken captive by the Tanu and transported through the primordial European landscape, the humans manage to break free, join in an uneasy alliance with the forest-dwelling Firvulag, and, finally, launch an attack against the Tanu city of light on the banks of a river that, eons later, would be called the Rhine.

Myth and legend, wit and violence, speculative science and breathtaking imagination mingle in this romantic fantasy, which is the first volume in a series about the exile world.


http://www.amazon.com/The-Many-Colored-Land-Julian-May-ebook/dp/B00633YOUU

Highly... highly recommended!

Did I say I was thrilled?

_____________________________

Love & Peace,

Far Dareis Mai

My old Piczo site seems to be gone, so no more Navajo Nation pics :(

(in reply to Hotschi)
Post #: 1508
RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment? - 3/9/2015 6:23:54 PM   
TulliusDetritus


Posts: 5521
Joined: 4/1/2004
From: The Zone™
Status: offline
More or less back to business

I am reading The Peloponnesian War by Donald Kagan. A little bit disappointed. This guy has to be some serious scholar (Yale) but still I have read THREE times Thucydides' original book. Kagan is at times er, how shall I say it... boring zzZZZZZzzzz

In the end, what are the sources, and I mean BIG sources, not some pages here and there (Diodorus etc)? Thucydides himself. So Kagan is basically saying (er, repeating) what er Thucydides said But the Greek's book has a lot of rythm, is never boring (hell, I re-read 3 times; an after this experience with Mr Kagan, I am planning to re-read a fourth time, just to remember how good the real thing is!).

Looks like Kagan's book is a resume. He's written a Peloponnesian War thing in 4 volumes.

One thing I know: I will stay away from them four volumes!

_____________________________

a nu cheeki breeki iv damke

(in reply to rhondabrwn)
Post #: 1509
RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment? - 3/9/2015 6:25:04 PM   
TulliusDetritus


Posts: 5521
Joined: 4/1/2004
From: The Zone™
Status: offline
Oh, and before that, Secret of the Hitites by C. W. Ceram

_____________________________

a nu cheeki breeki iv damke

(in reply to TulliusDetritus)
Post #: 1510
RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment? - 3/9/2015 6:53:20 PM   
Ironclad

 

Posts: 1924
Joined: 11/22/2006
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: TulliusDetritus

More or less back to business

I am reading The Peloponnesian War by Donald Kagan. A little bit disappointed. This guy has to be some serious scholar (Yale) but still I have read THREE times Thucydides' original book. Kagan is at times er, how shall I say it... boring zzZZZZZzzzz

In the end, what are the sources, and I mean BIG sources, not some pages here and there (Diodorus etc)? Thucydides himself. So Kagan is basically saying (er, repeating) what er Thucydides said But the Greek's book has a lot of rythm, is never boring (hell, I re-read 3 times; an after this experience with Mr Kagan, I am planning to re-read a fourth time, just to remember how good the real thing is!).

Looks like Kagan's book is a resume. He's written a Peloponnesian War thing in 4 volumes.

One thing I know: I will stay away from them four volumes!


I enjoyed Kagan's lecture series from Yale which is on You Tube.

(in reply to TulliusDetritus)
Post #: 1511
RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment? - 3/10/2015 12:50:11 AM   
Ranger33

 

Posts: 557
Joined: 8/11/2012
Status: offline
The Call of Cthulhu by H. P. Lovecraft

I'm been working my way through a compilation of pretty much all of his works and have of course been looking forward to this one. Pretty good so far!

(in reply to Ironclad)
Post #: 1512
RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment? - 3/10/2015 9:03:22 PM   
parusski


Posts: 4804
Joined: 5/8/2000
From: Jackson Tn
Status: offline
And now for something completely different:

Frost at Christmas, R. D. Wingfield

Loved the tv program and decided to read all the Frost books.

_____________________________

"I hate newspapermen. They come into camp and pick up their camp rumors and print them as facts. I regard them as spies, which, in truth, they are. If I killed them all there would be news from Hell before breakfast."- W.T. Sherman

(in reply to warspite1)
Post #: 1513
RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment? - 3/11/2015 1:51:59 PM   
warspite1


Posts: 41353
Joined: 2/2/2008
From: England
Status: offline
Enjoying Clay Blair's U-boat war so much I've ordered Silent Victory.

Hopefully this will prove as good and will be as detailed as the U-boat books on how the Japanese sought (spectacularly badly) to counter the enemy.



_____________________________

England expects that every man will do his duty. Horatio Nelson October 1805



(in reply to parusski)
Post #: 1514
RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment? - 3/13/2015 6:52:34 PM   
Hotschi


Posts: 548
Joined: 1/18/2010
From: Austria
Status: offline
Silent Victory is a very good book, although at times a bit "dry". Nonetheless, it's IMHO the best book about the USN submarine campaign in the Pacific.

Finished Ian Trenowden's The Hunting Submarine: The Fighting Life of HMS Tally-Ho - the appendix lists all submarine sinkings in the Macassar Strait by the RN submarines. Good book!

On to the next "Royal Navy submarine book", again written by the officer commanding himself; Unbroken: The Story of an Submarine by Alastair Mars. A U-Class submarine, serving in the Mediterranean.

_____________________________

"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.

(in reply to warspite1)
Post #: 1515
RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment? - 3/13/2015 8:24:18 PM   
Aurelian

 

Posts: 3916
Joined: 2/26/2007
Status: offline
Tennozan: The Battle of Okinawa and the Atomic Bomb

_____________________________

If the Earth was flat, cats would of knocked everything off of it long ago.

(in reply to Hotschi)
Post #: 1516
RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment? - 3/13/2015 9:15:58 PM   
parusski


Posts: 4804
Joined: 5/8/2000
From: Jackson Tn
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

Enjoying Clay Blair's U-boat war so much I've ordered Silent Victory.

Hopefully this will prove as good and will be as detailed as the U-boat books on how the Japanese sought (spectacularly badly) to counter the enemy.




I read Clay Blair's U-Boat books a few years ago and loved them.

_____________________________

"I hate newspapermen. They come into camp and pick up their camp rumors and print them as facts. I regard them as spies, which, in truth, they are. If I killed them all there would be news from Hell before breakfast."- W.T. Sherman

(in reply to warspite1)
Post #: 1517
RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment? - 3/14/2015 10:56:21 AM   
Ironclad

 

Posts: 1924
Joined: 11/22/2006
Status: offline
Trevor Royle: Civil War - The Wars of the Three Kingdoms 1638-1660

(in reply to parusski)
Post #: 1518
RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment? - 3/16/2015 3:59:14 PM   
TulliusDetritus


Posts: 5521
Joined: 4/1/2004
From: The Zone™
Status: offline
And back to some more political economy. I will never have enough

I have just started The Price of Inequality: How Today's Divided Society Endangers Our Future by Joseph Stiglitz (awarded Nobel Prize in economics in 2001)

_____________________________

a nu cheeki breeki iv damke

(in reply to Ironclad)
Post #: 1519
RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment? - 3/16/2015 8:39:28 PM   
Hotschi


Posts: 548
Joined: 1/18/2010
From: Austria
Status: offline
Finished Unbroken: The Story of an Submarine by Alastair Mars. Good book, although it reads like a novel at times, with plenty of dialogues. Mars went on to command HM submarine Thule in the Far East, but he only mentions that fact and nothing about it's patrols there.

Now on to a book about RN submarines just the way I was looking for, Sea Wolves: The exraordinary Story of Britain's WW2 Submarines by Tim Clayton.

_____________________________

"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.

(in reply to TulliusDetritus)
Post #: 1520
RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment? - 3/19/2015 4:43:16 PM   
Kuokkanen

 

Posts: 3545
Joined: 4/2/2004
Status: offline
I'm reading novel Unto the Breach by John Ringo and I was just rolling over the floor laughing my ass off. So group of paramilitary types are on grounded MC-130 starting to get equipped for HALO drop. I quote you the part:
quote:

"It is as I thought," Julia said, undoing the ties of her blouse and stripping it over her head. "We are in a hurry, yes? So let's 'get it on.'-"
"Julia Makanee!" Jeseph snapped as Vanner's mouth dropped. Of course the latter was unnoticed by anyone, including Julia, who was fixedly concentrating on her task.
"Shut up, Jeseph Mahona," Julia replied, reaching for the ties of her skirt. "First of all, I outrank you. Second, we don't have time for your complaints. Now start getting undressed. We have an insertion to make."
Vanner's brain kicked in just enough for him to want to point out that both "get it on" and "insertion" had dual meanings but paused and started taking off his clothes.


< Message edited by Matti Kuokkanen -- 3/19/2015 7:28:38 PM >


_____________________________

You know what they say, don't you? About how us MechWarriors are the modern knights, how warfare has become civilized now that we have to abide by conventions and rules of war. Don't believe it.

MekWars

(in reply to Hotschi)
Post #: 1521
RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment? - 3/19/2015 6:17:45 PM   
berto


Posts: 20708
Joined: 3/13/2002
From: metro Chicago, Illinois, USA
Status: offline

Eight down, three more to go. Now reading:

The Story of Civilization: The Age of Voltaire [volume 9], by Will & Ariel Durant

_____________________________

Campaign Series Legion https://cslegion.com/
Campaign Series Lead Coder https://www.matrixgames.com/forums/tt.asp?forumid=1515
Panzer Campaigns, Panzer Battles, Civil War Battles Lead Coder https://wargameds.com

(in reply to berto)
Post #: 1522
RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment? - 3/23/2015 7:15:46 PM   
warspite1


Posts: 41353
Joined: 2/2/2008
From: England
Status: offline
Oh I say Look what's coming down the tracks later this year!!







Attachment (2)

_____________________________

England expects that every man will do his duty. Horatio Nelson October 1805



(in reply to warspite1)
Post #: 1523
RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment? - 3/24/2015 5:46:36 PM   
TulliusDetritus


Posts: 5521
Joined: 4/1/2004
From: The Zone™
Status: offline
The Great Crash 1929 by John Kenneth Galbraith

_____________________________

a nu cheeki breeki iv damke

(in reply to warspite1)
Post #: 1524
RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment? - 3/31/2015 2:51:28 PM   
TulliusDetritus


Posts: 5521
Joined: 4/1/2004
From: The Zone™
Status: offline
Principles of Economics by Alfred Marshall (1890)

_____________________________

a nu cheeki breeki iv damke

(in reply to TulliusDetritus)
Post #: 1525
RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment? - 3/31/2015 7:36:24 PM   
mikkey


Posts: 3142
Joined: 2/10/2008
From: Slovakia
Status: offline
Frederick Forsyth - The Kill List

(in reply to TulliusDetritus)
Post #: 1526
RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment? - 3/31/2015 8:28:00 PM   
Hotschi


Posts: 548
Joined: 1/18/2010
From: Austria
Status: offline
Finished Sea Wolves: The exraordinary Story of Britain's WW2 Submarines by Tim Clayton. Very good overview of RN submarine operations in WW2, but unlike Silent Victory, which lists operations of USN submarines on a monthly basis, this one puts the involved servicemen in the foreground. Interesting that Clayton judges Mars very differently as he does himself... Now I also know who Gamp was. Good read, was impressed, can recommend it.

Now I've started Hunter-Killer: U.S. Escort Carriers in the Battle of the Atlantic by William T. Y'Blood.

Nice finds you show here, warspite1. I ordered this http://www.amazon.com/Escort-Carriers-Aviation-Support-Ships/dp/B001UFNFJ2/ref=sr_1_33?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1427833626&sr=1-33&keywords=stefan+terzibaschitsch today.

_____________________________

"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.

(in reply to mikkey)
Post #: 1527
RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment? - 3/31/2015 9:09:53 PM   
Orm


Posts: 22154
Joined: 5/3/2008
From: Sweden
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: mikkey

Frederick Forsyth - The Kill List

So what do you think about it? Is it worth getting?

_____________________________

Have a bit more patience with newbies. Of course some of them act dumb -- they're often students, for heaven's sake. - Terry Pratchett

(in reply to mikkey)
Post #: 1528
RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment? - 3/31/2015 9:16:55 PM   
parusski


Posts: 4804
Joined: 5/8/2000
From: Jackson Tn
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Orm


quote:

ORIGINAL: mikkey

Frederick Forsyth - The Kill List

So what do you think about it? Is it worth getting?


Well I have read it and thought it was very good. You can even get a copy on Amazon for $.01 plus shipping.

_____________________________

"I hate newspapermen. They come into camp and pick up their camp rumors and print them as facts. I regard them as spies, which, in truth, they are. If I killed them all there would be news from Hell before breakfast."- W.T. Sherman

(in reply to Orm)
Post #: 1529
RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment? - 3/31/2015 9:20:59 PM   
Orm


Posts: 22154
Joined: 5/3/2008
From: Sweden
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: parusski


quote:

ORIGINAL: Orm


quote:

ORIGINAL: mikkey

Frederick Forsyth - The Kill List

So what do you think about it? Is it worth getting?


Well I have read it and thought it was very good. You can even get a copy on Amazon for $.01 plus shipping.

Thank you, Steiner.

I'll look for a copy here then because I am vary of the shipping costs from US and potential extra costs by customs.

_____________________________

Have a bit more patience with newbies. Of course some of them act dumb -- they're often students, for heaven's sake. - Terry Pratchett

(in reply to parusski)
Post #: 1530
Page:   <<   < prev  49 50 [51] 52 53   next >   >>
All Forums >> [General] >> General Discussion >> RE: What Book Are You Reading at the moment? Page: <<   < prev  49 50 [51] 52 53   next >   >>
Jump to:





New Messages No New Messages
Hot Topic w/ New Messages Hot Topic w/o New Messages
Locked w/ New Messages Locked w/o New Messages
 Post New Thread
 Reply to Message
 Post New Poll
 Submit Vote
 Delete My Own Post
 Delete My Own Thread
 Rate Posts


Forum Software © ASPPlayground.NET Advanced Edition 2.4.5 ANSI

1.438