Guns of August by Barbara Tuchman, Robert K. Massie (Foreword by), Barbara Wertheim Tuchman (Preface by)

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(Paperback)

Average Customer Rating: Customer Rating for this product is 4 out of 5 (7 ratings)

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  • Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
  • Pub. Date: March 1994
  • ISBN-13: 9780345386236
  • Sales Rank: 17,537
  • 511pp
 
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Biography

Barbara W. Tuchman achieved prominence as a historian with The Zimmermann Telegram and international fame with The Guns of August, which won the Pulitzer Prize. There followed five more books: The Proud Tower, Stilwell and the American Experience in China (also awarded the Pulitzer Prize), A Distant Mirror, Practicing History, and The March of Folly. The First Salute was Mrs. Tuchman’s last book before her death in February 1989.

Customer Reviews

Number of Reviews: 7
Average Rating: Customer Rating for this product is 4 out of 5
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Customer Rating for this product is 4 out of 5 A reviewer
Crispy, A reviewer, 05/27/2007

This book is a very in depth book on the lead up to and first month of the first world war, well researched so well you can almost imagine being there. If it wasn't so serious it would be amusing when you read about the incompetence, ego's, petty squabbling, dated tatics, failure to see the obvious the list goes on.

Customer Rating for this product is 5 out of 5 My God How Good Cna It Get
A reviewer (amlopgar@aol.com) , history buff/former pilot, 05/12/2006

First of all I consider Tuchman not only a first rate historian but but also a first rate writer,comparable perhaps only to Robert K. Massie (Castles of Steel,Dreadnought).This is one book that shows the true tragedy of the summer of 1914 when the Great Powers of Europe blindly stumbled into a murderous war costing millions of soldiers' lives and also civilians' in the 1918 influenza pandemic where the malnourished German population was decimated. The generals leading the operations are not portrayed as 'donkeys leading the lions',but simply as technically not up to date 19th century men not realizing that the heroic ways of offensive warfare did not work against machine guns and quickfiring artillery. Younger Moltke learned this -Joffre and Haig did not.These men did not know that the minimal infantry numbers of Frederick,Moltke,and even Napoleon were supplanted by huge masses of infatry which could not perform the Prussian charges nor Maneuvres sur derriere of Napoleon but needed huge logistics tails which Schlieffen conveniently neglected in his Great Memorandum considering his war of movement and rigid time tables proposed. The innovative way of waging war was fought at sea considering the distant blockade,the U boat war and the defense against it.Jutland was not that innovative although the charge of caution against Jellicoe was unjust since he won the battle strategically. Tuchman describes the initial war of movement before it ground to a halt. She treats Molke the Yonger as what he was a physically sick old man out his depth trying to do the best he could. Of course this book is a classic.Why not? It should be.

Also recommended: Massie 'Dreadnought', 'Castles of Steel',Corelli Barnett 'Swordbeares',Keegan 'History of First World War' Ferguson 'Pity of War'

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