@SuperbattleshipYamato hard to argue against any of this really. The IJN was so far gone by this point in the war that there’s not really much they could have done to salvage their situation one way or another. The bit about the allies not having many LSTs in general is something I never knew before though.
What are you reading
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My recommendations:
http://legendarywarbooks.blogspot.com/Check at least
Witold Pilecki The Auschwitz Volunteer, really amazing real life story WW2And
Kurt “Panzer” Meyer, Waffen SS General
Something like “Saving private Ryan” on steroids.-Krp-
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Just finished A Hobbit, A Wardrobe and A Great War by Joseph Loconte.
In my youth, I read (and re-read) J.R.R. Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings trilogy (and The Hobbit), as well as C.S. Lewis’ Chronicles of Narnia. Loconte’s book taught me that the aforementioned authors’ works were heavily influenced by their experiences in World War One. From descriptions of battle to individual characters, the connections are there. I used to think it curious that, after doing the LOTR and Hobbit movies, Peter Jackson would move on to They Shall Not Grow Old; it now makes perfect sense…And now, I have to re-read The Hobbit and the LOTR trilogy.
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I just finished *The Battle For North Africa *by John Strawson.
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all of the “Sharpe” novels by Bernard Cornwell. Not quite halfway through. Only read 3 or 4, years ago. Kinda dime novel type reads but he has them based on real events.
I’ve always liked a ruthless protagonist anyway. Probably why I like “Jack Reacher” too. lol
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@barnee said in What are you reading:
all of the “Sharpe” novels by Bernard Cornwell. Not quite halfway through. Only read 3 or 4, years ago. Kinda dime novel type reads but he has them based on real events.
I’ve always liked a ruthless protagonist anyway. Probably why I like “Jack Reacher” too. lol
If you like Sharpe, barnee, you should try his The Last Kingdom series. In my view they are even better.
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Recently finished “Churchill: Walking with Destiny” by Andrew Roberts. I thought it was a marvellous book. But then I am as much of a Churchill fan as the author and now rather better informed as to why I am right to be!
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Thanks Panic. Are those the “Uthred” ones ? I read a couple a few years ago. They are pretty good. I’ll have to start from the beginning so I can get them in order. I read the very first two i think and then missed some, so quit reading them.
I see there’s a tv show/netflix or something series too. might be worth checking out.
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@barnee That’s them. I have read all of them and love the way the Uhtred develops from a young hot head into a wily old warrior.
The BBC / Netflix series is difficult for lovers of the books to swallow at first. There are lots of changes to the story to get to Uhtred the warrior much more quickly than the books do. But then the series settles into a much more recognisable story and gets better and better. I particularly like the depiction of Alfred the Great. Unfortunately there are no plans to make more series.
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@ABWorsham4 Currently I’m reading False Flags, Disguised German Raiders Of World War 2.
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@ABWorsham4 I’m not familiar with False Flags, but I’ve read Mrs. Ferguson’s Tea Set, Japan and the Second World War: The Global Consequences Following Germany’s Sinking of the SS Automedon in 1940 by Eiji Seki. It’s an excellent account of the exploits of the German commerce raider Atlantis, and I found it fascinating as a Japanese perspective of WWII.
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@The-Pripet-Martian I have read two books concerning Atlantis, The German Raider Atlantis and Ship 16. I’ll look for this book.
False Flags doesn’t cover Atlantis much. It covers the lesser known raiders and supply ships.
I didn’t realize the US Navy actively hunted for the raider Komet. The raider entered the Pan American Zone in the Pacific near the Galapagos Islands sinking 3 Allied vessels.
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@ABWorsham4 The more I read, the more I learn that American neutrality pre-Pearl Harbor was extremely nuanced, to say the least. Very interesting stuff.
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@The-Pripet-Martian said in What are you reading:
@ABWorsham4 The more I read, the more I learn that American neutrality pre-Pearl Harbor was extremely nuanced, to say the least. Very interesting stuff.
No doubt, escorts were taking an active role in the Battle of the Atlantic. American made jeeps, trucks, tanks and planes were operating in North Africa, firing munitions fabricated in the States.
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The Defenders of Taffy 3 and The Last Stand of the Tin Can Sailors. Good accounts of the Battle of Leyte Gulf.
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@ABWorsham4 I’m currently reading George Marshall, Defender of the Republic.
I finished Hitler’s Secret Pirate Fleet by James Duffy. Also I read a 1955 classic, The Secret Raiders by David Woodward. These two books finished my quest for knowledge of German Commerce Raiders.
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Currently I am reading a book called Seizing the Enigma: The Race to Break the German U-boat Codes. So far it has been pretty interesting.
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I’m reading anything by Antony Beevor, such as ‘Ardennes 1944.’ Also ‘Band Of Brothers,’ being a classic.
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@ABWorsham4 I assume that is about the Skorney raids?
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@abworsham4 I’m currently reading Shelby Foote’s The Civil War, A Narrative, Volume three .
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Have any of you read Sean McMeekin’s book, Stalin’s War?