The Guns of August

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The Guns of August

The Guns of August


The Guns of August


Download PDF The Guns of August

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The Guns of August

Tuchman masterfully portrays this transition from 19th to 20th Century, focusing on the turning point in the year 1914: the month leading up to the war and the first month of the war. With fine attention to detail, she reveals how and why the war started, and why it could have been stopped but wasn't, managing to make the story utterly suspenseful even when we already know the outcome.

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Audible Audiobook

Listening Length: 19 hours and 9 minutes

Program Type: Audiobook

Version: Unabridged

Publisher: Blackstone Audio, Inc.

Audible.com Release Date: April 28, 2008

Language: English, English

ASIN: B0018O22QC

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

The Guns of August is one of the worst history books ever written. B. Tuchman displays an arrogant and absolutely violent anti German bias in her examination of the war. This isn't history in any sense, it is pure propaganda.The Germans of WWI were not the Nazis of WWII. The Germans did not fight like beasts and they did not murder, torture or otherwise disobey the rules of warfare as understood at the time. No reputable author who has reviewed the war accuses the Germans of anything like the depravity Tuchman ascribes to them. Keegan, SLA Marshall and numerous other key historians simply do not report the war as Ms. Tuchman does because they do not swallow propaganda as truth. What Tuchman has done is adopt British propaganda, published during the war, as truth. In fact, what the English were reporting was pure fabrication set forth as an unbiased government study of German actions in Belgium.A truly worthless book that slants and taints history in the worst possible way. The author's motivations for such drivel cannot be known, but the fact that it is there is not disputable. Historians do, by the very fact that they are human, slant history to fit their unstated and often unexamined assumptions. But no historian should ever willfully bend the truth to fit his or her world view, or be so dumb as to not know they are doing it. The best historians strive to avoid bias, but openly admit that it is there. The key is making one's best effort to avoid it.If you really want to know about World War I read John Keegan. Save your time and money and avoid this trash.March 2013: I am updating this review to add several books on WWI that I think are very good,The Great War (West Point Military History)The West Point Military History Series The Great War, Strategies and Tactics of the First World War; excellent professional discussion of the combat; and West Point Atlas for the Great War: Strategies and Tactics Of The First World War (West Point Military History Series) this Atlas will allow the reader to understand the Great War and the movements of armies during the conflict as no other book can. Both these books are indispensable for anyone wanting to understand WWI. The Great War: A Combat History of the First World War The Great War by Peter Hart, published in 2013 this is an excellent description of how the combat evolved over the course of the war;Dreadnought, Dreadnaught by Massy is THE book for understanding the run up to WWI - a MUST read for those really interested in the war and the era that led up to the fighting. Anyone reading Dreadnaught will understand that it took years of missteps and poor leadership to trigger the war. The book is also a great read.The First World War Keegan's The First World War is an essential history for those interested in how the war came to be and how it was fought. Keegan is excellent in making observations concerning "the obvious" which isn't obvious at all until he points it out. The complete loss of communications with the troops after they went over the top for example, is brought out by Keegan, and few if any others, but explains so much about why combat on the Western front killed so many.Eleventh Month, Eleventh Day, Eleventh Hour: Armistice Day, 1918 World War I and Its Violent Climax Persico's book the Eleventh Month, Eleventh Day, Eleventh Hour is a must read to understand, or at least attempt to understand, the mentality of the leaders (generals) of WWI. It is a complete condemnation of the thinking process of the "leaders" sending men into battle in that era. If you have not read this book, you do not know WWI.There are many other worthwhile books on WWI. These are the best of them, I think. The Guns of August is among the worst of them, perhaps the worst.AD2

I fell in love with history at the age of 6 and excelled in it at school. One of my undergraduate majors was history and I spent a lot of time learning about the American Civil War and World War II. While I have a decent knowledge of World War I, it is a significant gap in my deep understanding of the 20th and 21st centuries.H.W. Brands is one of my favorite modern American historians. He has written excellent books on TR, Grant, and the collision between Truman and MacArthur. In an interview, he mentioned that he has tried to copy the writing style of Barbara Tuchman, for he views her "The Guns of August" as the finest history book written. I bought it based on that recommendation.This book was published in 1962. Ms. Tuchman is not a trained historian and does not have a PhD in the subject (neither did Gibbon or Churchill). It won the Pulitzer for non-fiction in 1962. Reading it 56 years after it was first published, I was absolutely blown away. While I don't want to fall victim to recency bias, it is clear to me that this is the finest piece on history by an American that I have ever read. Ms. Tuchman made extensive use of primary sources. She has an amazing grasp of the both micro and macro elements of the lead-up to and the first month of the war. Perhaps most significantly, she writes clearly and vividly. The book, despite having lots of information, is a breeze and a joy to read. It is fascinating.I am deeply embarrassed that it took me this long to discover and read this book. Truly remarkable.

“The Guns of August” has been called the book that saved the world. In the fall of 1962, looking at each other across the island of Cuba, the United States and the Soviet Union came nose to nose to pulling the trigger on a nuclear weapons war. United States Air Force U2 pilot Major Rudolf Anderson, USAF was shot down and killed. “Our guest has been up there for over an hour,” [Russian] Lieutenant General Stepan Grechko told a deputy. “I think we should give the order to shoot it down, as it is discovering our positions in depth.” With the commanding general, the only man authorized to order a surface-to-air missile launch, nowhere to be found, Grechko gave the order himself: “Destroy Target Number 33.” American Generals urged President Kennedy to order an attack on Cuba. The President said that one passage from Barbara Tuchman’s book gave him the courage to resist the pressure of his generals. “Your Majesty,” General Moltke said to the Kaiser, “it cannot be done” when the German army began its advance into Belgium and the Kaiser ordered Moltke to stop The trains are already in motion--and with that simple phrase, a war that took over 10 million lives was launched. I have read “Guns” several times over the years and I know how the story ends, yet I follow each decision as though it were now, each description as though it is happening, not has happened. It is an incredible story of horror, yet with examples of incredible courage. Her humor is able to shine through the darkness of the times with her characterizations of the Generals and Statesmen, Bethmann-Hollweg, “who means well feebly”, British Field Marshall Sir John French, “who knows nothing at all about the subject” and most of these are simply quotations made by other participants. Her effort was tireless, her research masterful, and her writing brilliant. I work with soldiers in the recruiting group here and I have bought and given this book to several of the sergeants hoping that it will percolate upward. It’s a command decision book and anyone who would think about war should understand the true horror of war. Not only were soldiers injured, blinded, maimed and killed, but the general population was starved so much that the Germans called the time “the turnip winter”. No bombs fell on Berlin but Germans suffered gravely. Paris was almost reached by the German armies until German General Von Kluck made one strategic mistake and presented his flank to the retreating French army. Remember too, this deals only with August, only a single month of a war that was to last four years, and to be the trigger for the next war, World War II, in which 60 million lives were lost. I believe an entire semester course should be taught using this book, not just in college, but also in high school. One thing I should mention. I speak both German and French, and read in them, so it can be a challenge with some of the reports---but, don’t give up on it. Her writing still come through, loud and clear, and clairvoyant.Stephen Joe Payne

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