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Commando: Winning the Green Beret (Network Books)
 
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Commando: Winning the Green Beret (Network Books) [Hardcover]

Hugh McManners (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Book Description

0563369817 978-0563369813 October 1995
The Royal Marine Commandos were formed by Churchill during World War II and have earned a reputation as the most feared amphibious infantry in the world. They are highly trained, disciplined, tough, determined and efficient, always basing their operations on speed, mobility, surprise and fire-power. There are two ways to join the Commandos - through a Recruit Troop Course for teenagers, or through the All Arms Course for volunteeers from the Army, Royal Navy and Royal Air Force. Both involve intensive training, physical hardship and mental pressure, ending with the gruelling Commando tests. This book follows two such courses and presents a human story which finds the reality a far cry from the popular idea of Commandos as gung-ho Captain Hurricanes. The author, who himself successfully complete the All Arms Course, takes the reader through the agony and ecstasy of the Commando training programme in an effort to understand why these men endure this self-inflicted punishment, and to explain the pride and honour felt on winning the green beret.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

This brief, arresting book helps explain why Britain's Royal Marine Commandos are so highly regarded as amphibious infantry. The fast-paced narrative (based on a TV series shown in Britain) tracks the training of two groups of aspirants as they are tested in cliff-scaling, craft-landing exercises, close-quarter battle drills, obstacle courses and forced marches. The training is grueling, the drop-out rate high, the mental pressure even worse than the physical challenge. McManners, a retired British army officer, highlights the colorful dialogue between the veteran training team and the aspirants as the latter are alternately encouraged, berated and instructed. After the climactic Pass-Out Parade, here stirringly described, the survivors of the program?the longest military recruit training of any in the Western world?are pronounced full-fledged Commandos, handed their coveted green berets and assigned to Britain's Rapid Reaction Force. Illustrated.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

The green beret of the subtitle here is the headgear of the British Royal Marine Commandos, institutional descendants of the World War II commandos who began modern special warfare. Based on a TV series, the book follows two classes of marine aspirants, one made up of men who already belong to one or another military service, the other of mostly teenaged new recruits, through their training. The training is grueling, testing not only military skills and physical endurance, but also character and motivation, of which the instructors have an intuitive grasp many psychologists might envy. Subject and author are both British, and the prose shows this, sometimes delightfully: for instance, in terms such as admin vortex, which describes the condition of a would-be commando who cannot take care of himself or his equipment. In all, this is an admirable addition to our knowledge of elite military units and those who choose to serve in them. Roland Green

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 192 pages
  • Publisher: BBC Pubns (October 1995)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0563369817
  • ISBN-13: 978-0563369813
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.2 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,443,659 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Born in Oxford, raised in Australia, trained by the British Army, educated at Oxford University, after a 17 year military career, now writing books and living in central London.

I really liked Australia, and at the age of 13, it was a nightmare coming back to grey, dismal UK, where handicapped by my Ozzie accent, I had to learn Latin from scratch in a class that was already reading Horace (or something that was a great mystery to me).

But after then attending one of the UK's first comprehensive schools - as a guinea pig in the great 'Leicestershire Plan', there was no choice but to join the Army.

The Royal Military Academy Sandhurst was a severe culture shock. But after a couple of very happy years in a commando unit, three years at Oxford University reading geography and doing boxing (note the verbs) were both antidote and stimulus to further military adventures.

The apogee of my military career was the Falklands War. I then declined gently into Staff College Camberley, MoD staff appointments and a rather jolly final few years commanding an artillery gun battery in Northern Ireland, Thorney Island, and beside a lake with ducks in northern Germany.

Since then, I've produced television documentaries, spent five interesting years ad the Sunday Time's defence correspondent, whilst writing the sort of books Amazon so efficiently sells under my name on this site.

I live in central London, and have two astonishingly musical sons - one now in the Army on the brink of becoming a cavalry officer.

More information, blogs and various guides to the Army, survival and other related subjects maybe found at www.hughmcmanners.com

 

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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars the hardest elite inantry course in the world......, June 2, 1998
This review is from: Commando: Winning the Green Beret (Network Books) (Hardcover)
This book covers the last two weeks of the hardest infantry course in the western world. 6 months ( withou injury ) and then a week in the field immediately followed by a series of combat fitness tests. THe text accuratly covers what happens near the end of training for those who chose to be a bootneck and those who want to earn the covetted Green Beret and return to their home units to work alongside bootnecks in the field. I been to lympstone ( where recruit training is undertaken ) - the only thing missng is this book are the three hour PT 'beastings' on the assault course and the warmups prior to attacking any physical challenge. ( NB. All commando tests are carried out in BOOTS and with weighted webbing 22lbs min + weapon ) Excellent.
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