Discover
Jan 1, 1923 — Jan 1, 2005· 82 yrs

UNITED KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND AUTHOR · HISTORY · GENERALS

Kenneth John Macksey

Also known as: Kenneth Macksey, KENNETH MACKSEY

23
BOOKS
4.0
AVG RATING (2)
2
READERS

Kenneth John Macksey (1 July 1923 – 30 November 2005) was a British author and historian who specialized in military history and military biography, particularly of the Second World War.

Epsom, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland
Wikipedia

Supper was over by sundown, and Henry Edwards walked out from the house for a last look around.

— from The searchers

Most acclaimed

#2

First clash

0.0 (0)
#1

Why The Germans Lose At War

0.0 (0)

More than 60 years after their utter defeat and surrender, the Nazi army, navy, and air force are still remembered as the best organized, best trained, best equipped, and most formidable fighting forces of their day. The same can be said of the massive German army that battled under Kaiser Wilhelm a generation earlier. Led by brilliant generals and backed by state-of-the-art munitions industries, these powerful military organizations struck terror in the hearts of enemies and allies alike. So, why did they lose? In this masterful account of the failed German war machine, military historian Kenneth Macksey reveals that Germany's catastrophic failures had little to do with the random fortunes of war, but were the inevitable result of its military structure, leadership, and history. Its great strengths -- inspired generals and strategists, the innovative development of military forces, and the great skill and tenacity of its fighting men -- were repeatedly undermined by short-term war policies, arrogance and a tendency to believe its own propaganda, and the politicization of military staffs. These flaws, problematic even in Germany's great 19th century victories, became fatal when combined with 20th century dreams of world dominion. Complete with campaign maps, command-structure charts, and lists of major German military leaders, Why the Germans Lose at War combines brilliant military and political analysis with a powerful cautionary tale for any nation that seeks to rule the world through force alone. - Jacket flap.

#3

Invasion

0.0 (0)

Book Review: Invasion: Earth by Harry Harrison An alien ship crashes to Earth and when investigated turns out some violent aliens and their captive from another race. Having befriended the captive, there is a chance to gain a powerful ally in a war which is rolling towards Earth. This is typical of the sort of science fiction book I used to love when I was younger. Short, to the point, it has a good idea and investigates it through to the end, which may or may not have a good twist at the end. Harry Harrison is particularly good at writing this sort of book, but the 70's and early 80's has loads of examples of them from all sorts of authors, including luminaries like Isaac Asimov and Arthur C Clarke. The characters are relatively smart, the good ideas spread around a few of them so it doesn't seem too unrealistic, and you can see the logic behind their arguments. All in all it's just a nice little SF book which will give you some entertainment for a few hours.

Books

Newest First