Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A first-rate exploration of USNA, October 15, 2005
As a 1996 graduate of the Naval Academy, I stumbled upon a rich introspective experience in the pages of Annapolis Autumn. With the insightful objectivity of one who is both an insider and outsider on The Yard, Fleming paints the institution not only in the usual blacks, whites, blues and golds; but in a varied pallet that reveals volumes about USNA and, ultimately, about those of us who are products of its education. Whether the reader is affiliated with the Academy or not, he or she will find a fascinating portrait of an institution devoted (not necessarily in this order) to the most demanding standards of higher learning and to the service of a necessarily single-minded, self-assured, mission-oriented organization like the U.S. Navy.
Through a series of comparisons--Athens vs. Sparta, Classical vs. Romantic, St. John's College vs. USNA--Fleming seems to search for equilibrium. In this search, he treats the reader with many intriguing observations, such as the equally noble but ultimately irreconcilable goals of St. John's College to "...free men and women from the tyrannies of unexamined opinions and inherited prejudices," and those of USNA to "...imbue (midshipmen) with the highest ideals of duty, honor and loyalty." Ultimately, however, his analysis of USNA does not force a conclusion or a solution on the reader. Instead, it makes us think, which appears to have been Fleming's constant two-decades' challenge as a professor. Annapolis Autumn shows us that literature, at the Naval Academy and elsewhere, is not simply a harmless "bull major" endeavor to throw the pale cast of thought over decidedly noble enterprises, but rather a means to help us understand who we are, what we serve, and what it's all about.
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Best book yet on life on the Yard, October 3, 2005
I am a graduate of USNA and this book is the best I've read yet on life at USNA. Dr. Fleming catches subtleties of the midshipman life that I suspect escaped even some of my fellow alumni. As one might expect from a man who holds a PhD in English, the prose is well done, very clean and exact, with a great flair for description. If anyone asks me what they should read to learn more about life at the 'Boat School' this will the be the first title out of my mouth.
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16 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Thought provoking , October 13, 2005
In a few weeks I will be returning to the Naval Academy for my 30th Reunion. One of my friends and classmates, a mechanical engineering professor at the Academy, sugested that I read Bruce Fleming's "Annapolis Autumn."
Fleming is a contemporary of mine, 50ish. While I sat in the student desks of Sampson Hall, where he now teaches, he was attending classes at Haverford. After 20+ years of laboring in the halls of academia as it it practised at a service academy, he has some things to say.
I only hope that people listen.
The book is nearly schizophrenic. Some of Fleming's observations are pungently witty, acerbic insights into the hot house world of the Naval Academy. I laughed out loud. At other times I found myself closing the book, taking a deep breath, and forcing myself to think and confront his more serious thoughts.
Part III of the book is quite serious. In that section Fleming grapples with the Classical versus Romatic philosophical views of the Academy, as well as a disturbing introduction into the admissions policy. He relates, over the course of several chapters, a chilling episode where is asked by the academic dean to withdraw an opinion piece that he had submitted to the Washington Post in defense of a Supreme Court ruling that determined race should not be a factor in college admissions. As a tenured professor Fleming enjoyed a measure of legal, moral and ethical protection. But the unspoken threat becomes more powerful that a palpable one.
This is a book I would recommend without hestitation to anyone who has attended Annapolis or is considering attending. It goes without saying that those who are currently students would find the book enlightening. Fleming, better than any outsider, takes us behind the veneer of the spit and polish and the pomp and circumstance and into the inner world of midshipmen.
Of all my classes at the Academy, I remember the English classes the most. They remain in my memory an island among the ocean of science, engineering and naval warfare. Fleming reminds us that we are men, or women, first, then we are officers.
Bravo Zulu.
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