war memoirs

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Discussion

paul_y3k

Original Poster:

618 posts

215 months

Thursday 10th May 2018
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not due to any particular blood lust, but I've started reading lots of war memoirs and have found them very interesting.
so far I've read :

Hellfire Ed Macy
Jeffrey Wellum (sp?) Spitfire
Sniper One
ChickenHawk
to name a few ...

Any other recommendations ?

JackThrust

158 posts

170 months

Wednesday 16th May 2018
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I also seem to be reading mostly war memoirs lately, usually ones based on Vietnam. Chickenhawk was a great read. The others that have stuck with me are:

When Thunder Rolled Following an F-105 pilot in Operation Rolling Thunder. You really get a sense of the ridiculousness of the limitations the airmen were under in Vietnam, also the author takes you on a fascinating journey as he goes from frankly terrified to thoroughly competent over the course of his tour.

Acceptable Loss I'm not sure what to say about this one other than the author has massive balls of steel while also being humble. Well worth a read.

Moving away from Vietnam I highly recommend Scram! following a Royal Navy Wessex pilot in the Falklands.




jmorgan

36,010 posts

291 months

Wednesday 16th May 2018
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With the Old breed. By E.B.Sledge. A marine that fought in some of the nastiest island hoping in the a Pacific.

Enemy Coast Ahead. Guy Gibson.

Strong Men Armed. Robert Leckie. Another marine story in the pacific.

Edited by jmorgan on Wednesday 16th May 10:47

Cpt Stirling

313 posts

208 months

Friday 18th May 2018
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On the Chickenhawk theme may I suggest Low Level Hell by Hugh Mills. If you like behind enemy lines type stuff in the Vietnam era anything by Gary Linderer is worth a look. The Ravens - about the secret war in Laos is also a good read. Totally different but very good is The Forgotten Highlander by Allistair Urquhart, the experiences of war in the Far East are astonishing.

irocfan

42,391 posts

197 months

Friday 18th May 2018
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Stuka Pilot - Hans Ulrich Rudel. Not the best written but interesting non-the-less

jmorgan

36,010 posts

291 months

Saturday 19th May 2018
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Voices from the Royal Navy.
https://www.amazon.com/Lost-Voices-Royal-Navy-Arth...

This is a collection of eye witness accounts and it is grim in places. So not an author for one book, but many accounts in one book and includes marines fighting inland in WWI.

TR4man

5,320 posts

181 months

Saturday 19th May 2018
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To me the greatest war book ever was Richard Hillary's The Last Enemy which I had read initially when I was in my teens but keep coming back to every few years for a re-read.

I also enjoyed Fly For Your Life which was the biography of Bob Stanford-Tuck and written by Larry Forrester.

I'd also recommend Happy Odyssey by Adrian Carton de Wiart if you ever had any doubt that people were made of sterner stuff in days gone by. To give you a flavour, here is his Wikipedia entry https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adrian_Carton_de_W...

irocfan

42,391 posts

197 months

Saturday 19th May 2018
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The Devil's Guard is meant to be a good read - albeit one that has some doubts as to whether it's genuine

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Devil%27s_Guard

RizzoTheRat

26,002 posts

199 months

Tuesday 22nd May 2018
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You've already got 2 of my factories in Chickenhawk and First Light, so if you enjoyed those try Norman Hanson's "Carrier Pilot".

Not a war memoir as such as most of it is after the war, but Eric 'Winkle' Browns "Wings On My Sleeve" is excellent.

For more recent stuff, I enjoyed Tim Collins "Rules OF Engagement".

I didn't really get in to Sandy Woodwards "100 days", but having met Julian Thompson a while back I need to read "No Picnic" as he was a fascinating bloke to talk to.

Edited by RizzoTheRat on Tuesday 22 May 08:22

Gary29

4,317 posts

106 months

Tuesday 22nd May 2018
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No Moon Tonight

Perseverant

439 posts

118 months

Thursday 7th June 2018
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I was about to recommend Eric Brown's book. I'd also go for "Sagittarius Rising" by Cecil Lewis, a First War memoir with a fascinating final section on working as an instructor in China. "Goodbye to all that" is a classic First War memoir by Robert Graves. "Quartered Safe Out Here" by George MacDonald Fraser is an account of the author's time in Burma near the end of WW2 - a largely forgotten campaign. I could go on almost endlessly about other stuff, for example "The notebooks of Captain Coignet" if you could find it is a first hand account of Napoleon's campaign in Russia.

and31

3,568 posts

134 months

Monday 11th June 2018
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Lancaster Target by jack currie is a gripping read
Tank by ken tout was also very informative

BryanC

1,112 posts

245 months

Tuesday 12th June 2018
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If you liked Ken Tout's book, I suggest you try :

By Tank Into Normandy by Stuart Hills.

Finished it yesterday and you share the horror when a tank is 'brewed up' by a panzerfaust. Sometimes facing a Tiger or Panther when you are out-gunned and under-armoured. Such brave men. Actually it goes beyond Normandy and right through to the surrender in 45.
To quote Richard Holmes '..one of the best half dozen accounts of the Normandy campaign'.

ric p

609 posts

276 months

Friday 22nd June 2018
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I'm more fascinated by the WW2 books, especially aviation.

However got given Storm of Steel by Ernst Junger, an officer in the German army in WW1. It was one of the first accounts published after the war and republished may times since

It is strong stuff as he fought from start to finish and he had an interesting post war life as well.

It is a narrative rather than casting opinion.

I'd second Stuka Pilot, written by a man who hold the record for the most operational missions ever. A very effective operator, I'd suggest. Believe the Luftwaffe did a (unauthorised) fly past on his burial in the 80's with old comrades giving a Hilter salute as the put him in the ground.

anonymous-user

61 months

Thursday 12th July 2018
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Blood red Snow - German infantry WW2, eastern front.
tomorrow you die - Japanese PoW

Not well written but fascinating content.

I have loads more but will need to dig their titles out.

RizzoTheRat

26,002 posts

199 months

Thursday 12th July 2018
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TE Lawrence's Seven Pillars of Wisdom seems to be on the UK Staff College's required reading list, picked up a copy on kindle
a while back but not read it yet.

NordicCrankShaft

1,777 posts

122 months

Thursday 12th July 2018
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Somme mud, is from an Australian private during ww1. Very good read!

knk

1,291 posts

278 months

Thursday 12th July 2018
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"The Junior Officer's Reading Club" and "Kandak", both by Paddy Hennessey.

Bone Rat

369 posts

170 months

Monday 6th August 2018
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If you are interested in ww2 aviation I would recommend the two by Mano Ziegler, 'Hitler's Jet Plane' and 'Rocket Fighter'
They're accounts of the use of and squadrons flying the Me 262 and Me163. The latter being the better and gets the flavour of the madness of being strapped into a potentially lethal plane.
Far more sympathetic than Rudel

jjones

4,438 posts

200 months

Monday 27th August 2018
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NordicCrankShaft said:
Somme mud, is from an Australian private during ww1. Very good read!
This. Half way through it and it is a fascinating insight.