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Seller's Description:
Good. Good condition. Acceptable dust jacket. A copy that has been read but remains intact. May contain markings such as bookplates, stamps, limited notes and highlighting, or a few light stains. Bundled media such as CDs, DVDs, floppy disks or access codes may not be included. NOT AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT OUTSIDE OF THE UNITED STATES.
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Seller's Description:
Good. Hardcover book in good condition, but missing dust jacket if issued one. Some faint scuffing on the fore edge. Black marker mark on the top corner of the first page. Faint scuff inside the front cover. Tiny tear to top edge of the spine. Nice reading copy.
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Seller's Description:
Near fine in very good(+) jacket. With a handful of b/w photos throughout. 800 pages. 8vo, black cloth, d.w. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, (1981). A slightly edgeworn near fine copy in a very good(+) dust wrapper, minor scuffing to spine and lower rear panel.
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Seller's Description:
Good in Fair jacket. xviii, [4], 800 pages. Endpaper maps and photographs. Illustrations. Maps. Notes & sources. Index. Ink notation on fep. Edges soiled. DJ worn. Russell Weigley, (July 2, 1930-March 3, 2004) was the Distinguished University Professor of History at Temple University in Philadelphia and a noted military historian. His research and teaching interests centered on American and world military history, World War II, and the American Civil War. One of Weigley's most widely received contributions to research is his hypothesis of a specifically American Way of War, i.e. an approach to strategy and military operations, that, while not predetermined, is distinct to the United States because of cultural and historical constraints. Weigley's graduate teaching emphasized military history defined in a broadly comprehensive way, including operational, combat history but also extending to the larger issues of war and its significance; to the history of ideas about war, peace, and the armed forces; and to the place of the soldier in society. This is an analysis of command at both the strategic and the tactical level. All the complex ingredients of war: the impact of technology, the roles of personalities, the confusions of the battlefield are presented in a powerful narrative which is deeply founded in scholarship. The portraits of Field Marshal Montgomery and of Iikes lieutenants Omar N. Bradley, Jacob L. Devers, Courtney H. Hodges, George S. Patton, Jr., Alexander M. Patch, William H. Simpson, Leonard T. Gerow, J. Lawton Collins, and Matthew B. Ridgway, among others are the first detailed treatments that many of these leaders have received. Every major strategic and tactical decision in every battle of the American offensive is covered in detail with maps and careful descriptions of terrain features, including personal insights drawn from diaries kept at the American army group and army headquarters. This is a major and grippingly told reassessment of the leadership and the fighting capabilities of the Allied forces in climactic battles of World War II.
Does fine job of combining strategy and tactics with personalities of those involved. Also interesting history lessons of the origins of US Army units. May sound strange to say but this is a historical page turner even though we know the outcome.
Please note - the hard bound versions have terrible bindings. I went through two different used books and both fell apart while I was reading them. Maybe a bad glue day at the publisher? I don't know but I buy used hardback books all the time and have never had this happen before.