![]() |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I "bought the thing" too, and having skimmed it, it seems to me from first glance that it is a collection of pictures readily available from the National Archives, just that it has one guy putting a story to it. The story seems to be weaved through the interviews of what seems to be 3 or 4 veterans. It just seemed to me that you'd be expecting the next quote to come from someone else, but the same veteran would be quoted again and again from their interviews. Not to demean the testimony of these veterans, but the book seemed a little "thrown together' or basic to me. However, there does not seem to exist very much hardcopy literature on the Italian Campaign, or so my years of searching have told me, but maybe I just haven't found it yet.
Cheers, Glen. |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]() ![]() I figure with my copy of Nicolsson, the books by Mark Zuelke (or however he spells his name, apologies for being lazy), and this photo collection, I might have a better understanding of the Canadian part of my father's war. Bob ![]() |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Amazon came thorugh with bells on; my copy arrived today.
Unless I misread the description on the Amazon page, "Hell and High Water" ought not be described as a "pictorial history." There are good and useful photos right enough, but they are small. Words outnumber the photos, not making the net effect very "pictorial." But, aside from a large clanger on page 141 in which an M4A2E8 "roars across a field," the photos seem to belong here. I am always glad to have primary sources, so I am happy to have these veterans' recollections and memories. I just wish that I did not have to use my magnifying glass to appreciate the details of the photographs. In a nutshell, it's a keeper. Bob |
![]() |
|
|