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Fighting Patton: George S. Patton Jr. Through the Eyes of His Enemies Hardcover – September 16, 2011

3.1 out of 5 stars 25 customer reviews

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 528 pages
  • Publisher: Zenith Press; First edition (September 16, 2011)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 9780760341285
  • ISBN-13: 978-0760341285
  • ASIN: 0760341281
  • Product Dimensions: 6.2 x 1.5 x 9.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (25 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #148,520 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

By R. A Forczyk VINE VOICE on September 11, 2011
Format: Hardcover
Although there have been many books written about General George S. Patton since the mid-1970s, with Carlo D'Este's A Genius for War among the best, much of his life and battlefield career have become enshrouded by a certain popular mythology about him. Much of the Patton story was shaped unfavorably by detractors such as Omar Bradley or favorably by sycophantic aides. Yet despite a robust literature available on Patton, the real Patton remains elusive and there are aspects of his career that have not been delved into in any great detail, particularly how he was regarded by his enemies. In Fighting Patton, military historian Harry Yeide digs deeply into American, French and German primary source material to expose a Patton that few of us have seen before - Patton as viewed by his enemies. There is a wealth of fresh details in this book thanks to the author's diligent research in the National Archives, such as the identity of the German officer who was firing at Patton during the Meuse-Argonne offensive of 1918. While the Patton story normally focuses on American perspectives, Fighting Patton strives to show Patton's operations from the point of view of the men fighting him. This is a very well-researched and argued book that is enhanced by the author's ability to sift a multitude of facts in order to derive sober conclusions. The author's judgments about how Patton was viewed by his opponents will surprise some readers and revise some aspects of Patton mythology, but will also serve as a valuable addition to the literature on one of America's most famous generals of the Twentieth Century.

Fighting Patton consists of 14 sequential chapters with about 420 pages of narrative and a glossary. The author has also included 34 sketch maps and 52 B/W photos.
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Format: Hardcover Verified Purchase
I'm going to have to agree with the other 1star reviewed, and as such will keep it short. When you are done you will think Patton was the luckiest SOB in the war. Always advancing into a vacuum, Germans didn't know he was in n the field, the Germans couldn't muster the forces for defense.. Too much time spent on troop movement in Russia.

The book is a major disappointment. It will be on the auction site shortly, it does not deserve a spot on the bookshelf.
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Format: Hardcover
I started reading this book with a hope that it was going to truly provide what the flap of the jacket stated - a first time review of Patton by the German commanders he faced. "Disappointment" at what the book delivered is being charitable.

The reader should know, it is not until approximately page 250 (of 420 of text) that the author first actually provides a German assessment of Patton. Up until that point, we deal with Patton's pre-Second World Wat life (which is understandable for background), and mind-numbing (there is no other word) background on the German commanders he would face in North Africa, Sicily and France/Germany. Why the author felt it necessary to break down, to the brigade level, the composition of German forces in Russia (yes, Russia, a theater that Patton had nothing to do with) is beyond my comprehension. And the continuous use of German names and titles was beyond distraction.

Something else that struck me, there are a lot of oblique references to Hitler as being a quasi-military genius. The author sets out to discredit the history of "stand fast" and "yield no ground" and "fight to the death" orders of the Madman. He seems to go out of his way to say none of that is true. To begin with, such a theory is bizarre. But secondly, it had no relevance to what this book was purportedly about.

The background on German commanders is far, far too detailed. Do I need to know who they married, when they married and how many children they had? And, returning to the term mind-numbing, setting forth the order of battle for the Germans -- again down to brigades -- caused me to skip over whole paragraphs. That isn't military history -- it is filler.
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Format: Hardcover
I read most all of the reviews (unfortunately after the fact) posted of this book and have to agree with all of the "One Star" reviews. Yeide seems to have a proverbial ax to grind against Patton as constantly through the book he downplays any accomplishments of Patton's 3rd Army in France and Germany. He indicates that Patton was "lucky" over and over to the point where it's laughable - including a shot at the end of the book where Eisenhower supposedly tells Patton he was lucky. The other reviews point out the boring details of the German commanders and the dozens of ranks, none of which make much sense unless you are a member of the German military - so I won't harp on this point. He contradicts himself many times throughout the book - on page 197 he details the Herman Goering Division facing Patton in Sicily as green with hardly any soldiers who had fought before. Then after the Division is shifted away from Patton to fight Montgomery on the east coast of Sicily he describes them as the most powerful Axis Division in Sicily. When Patton is about to attack Metz later in the war, he says the battle is unnecessary and results in many costly casualties for no reason at all. However during the same discussion on the Metz battle, he says that Hitler refused to allow a German retreat and told his generals to fight to the death. So why would Yiede say that Metz was an unnecessary battle?? He constantly quotes German generals as saying Patton was cautious and failed to exploit weaknesses in the German lines, yet he also points out on numerous occasions that Patton was ordered to stop, or to go in a different direction, or simply ran out of gasoline and supplies because of his rapid advances.Read more ›
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