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The Fighting Pattons Mass Market Paperback – July 11, 2000
by
Brian Sobel
(Author),
George S. Patton Jr.
(Foreword)
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Brian Sobel
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Print length416 pages
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LanguageEnglish
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PublisherDell
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Publication dateJuly 11, 2000
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Dimensions4.25 x 1.5 x 7 inches
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ISBN-100440235723
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ISBN-13978-0440235729
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The Guns of August: The Pulitzer Prize-Winning Classic About the Outbreak of World War IBarbara W. TuchmanMass Market Paperback
Editorial Reviews
Review
"An extraordinary history."
-- The Wall Street Journal
"Strong, stirring, and inspiring...What a story it is!... A stunning account."
-- Army
-- The Wall Street Journal
"Strong, stirring, and inspiring...What a story it is!... A stunning account."
-- Army
From the Inside Flap
triumph over Nazi Germany, no name was more legendary than Patton, the general feared and admired even by his enemies. While Patton cut a path of victory in Europe, his son was growing up in his father's footsteps, rubbing shoulders with the sons and daughters of presidents, generals, and kings. Decades later, George S. Patton would get his chance to prove his valor. But this was a different kind of war, in a place called Vietnam....<br><br>Brimming with never-before-published information, plus interviews with such intriguing historical figures as Richard Nixon and General William Westmoreland, <b>The Fighting Pattons</b> captures a remarkable family through seasons of tragedy and victory. From their actions on the field to the abiding sense of duty that motivated them, here are two men who found a home in war, two men who served with brilliance, loyalty, and above all, an abiding commitment to the men who followed them into battle.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
1
BORN OF DISTINCTION
The Patton sons were all either killed, wounded, or otherwise affected by the Civil War.
--Ruth Ellen Patton Totten
It is said that a Patton has fought in nearly every conflict in America's history; yet the first Patton, one Robert Patton, was not a military man but a tobacco exporter from South Carolina, whose name first turns up on a deed in Fredericksburg, Virginia, in 1771. It has been established with considerable certainty that the name was an alias: the young man who called himself Robert Patton, then a popular last name in Scotland, was actually a wanted criminal in the old country. Like so many immigrants of those times, he had set out for America to leave his past behind. From such humble beginnings the family over the next two hundred years would make an indelible mark on the American landscape.
The Patton name has inspired countless literary endeavors, including many books and articles, published especially over the last fifty years. The story of Patton has been chronicled on television and in major motion pictures, including Patton, starring the award-winning actor George C. Scott. The name has been brought into the collective consciousness of America and much of the world through the power of Hollywood, with its impact across borders and languages.
An epic major motion picture that wins numerous awards will be seen by hundreds of millions of people around the globe, but it is the story being told that captures the imagination. The Patton saga is just such a story. The leading character is bigger than life, certainly as enhanced by the motion picture screen, which conveys the power and majesty of a persona of inspiring quality, crushing the enemies of freedom and democracy.
While the story of one general and hero is a central part of Patton history, it is not the only one. Importantly and significantly, there is more. The full story involves a son who also became a general, who participated in two of our most controversial wars, Korea and Vietnam. The fact is, the complete Patton military story ends not with General George S. Patton, Jr., but with his son, a general who fought in wars where the enemy was elusive as were the solutions to the problems facing America in the post-World War II era. Telling the story of Major General George S. Patton requires, however, not only recognizing the career of his father, the
famous field commander of World War II, but going back to the beginning, to set the scene.
America during the Colonial period was a place where new ideas flourished, where strangers and newcomers banded together to form communities; the young country was flexing its new-found power and allegiance to itself instead of the old country. With just such a backdrop Robert Patton established himself in the Fredericksburg area, ingratiating himself with the local citizens while running a tobacco business. Interestingly, whereas many men of his day fought in the Revolutionary War, Patton did not volunteer, preferring to remain friendly with both the British and Americans alike. During the war, however, Patton killed a British officer in a tavern altercation and was forced to keep a low profile for the remainder of the conflict.
Robert Patton was, if nothing else, a resourceful soul, undaunted by circumstance, who in the late 1770s would marry the daughter of General Hugh
Mercer, a close friend of George Washington. The union produced six children; one in particular, John Mercer Patton, went on to a distinguished career, including service in the United States Congress and as the acting governor of Virginia. He and his wife, Peggy French Williams, had twelve children, nine of whom, eight boys and one girl, lived to adulthood.
Seven sons of John and Peggy Mercer Patton would eventually join the Confederacy. The Civil War not only pitted the South against the North in America's greatest tragedy but drew into its wide net members of nearly every family, particularly in the South. The Pattons were no exception, feeling honor-bound to fight, and doing so with a high degree of dedication and bravery. Whether viewed from a Northern or Southern perspective, it was an especially cruel conflict, setting brother against brother and producting horrific and deadly battlefield technology. The famed "minie ball," as an example, designed in 1849 by C. E. Minie, a French Army captain, accounted for 90 percent of the casualties; another 8 percent were caused by
increasingly powerful and accurate artillery.
The Civil War, in which the Pattons played a significant role, was especially hard on the family. Ruth Ellen once said, "The Patton sons were all either killed, wounded, or otherwise affected by the Civil War." In addition
to splitting families, the war split the military. By 1861, it is reported, 820 graduates of the United States Military Academy at West Point were serving in the armies of both the North and South, though more than 75 percent remained
loyal to the Northern cause.
The Pattons, as Virginians and loyal to the South, fought on familiar ground. Virginia evolved as the leading theater of the Civil War; battles, engagements, and campaigns in Virginia exceeded those of any other state, including Tennessee. By war's end just under one-third of all military actions had occurred in Virginia, and extant reports from the field--including specific indications of their movements in battle by generals "Stonewall" Jackson and R. S. Ewell, among others--mention the Pattons in locations throughout the state.
One particular Patton, the fourth child of John and Peggy, was given the name George Smith; he was the first in a line of Pattons with the same first
name. Born in Fredericksburg, Virginia, in June 1833, he would eventually attend the Virginia Military Institute, where he graduated in 1852. After VMI, Patton set up a law practice and later formed a volunteer militia company, the Kanawha Rifles, in which he assumed the rank of captain. This company became
Company H of the 22nd Virginia Infantry when it was activated in late April 1861. When the entire regiment was sworn into the Confederate service, Patton became a lieutenant colonel and was ordered to report to Brigadier General Henry Wise, a past Virginia governor and now commander of the Army of the Kanawha.
Patton fought courageously. He was wounded in 1862 but returned to the war, to be killed in the third battle of Winchester, often called the battle of Opequon, in September 1864. "At the time Patton was killed in action, his commission as a general in the Confederate Army was in the mail," said Ruth Ellen. It was the second death of a son in the war for the Pattons, who had lost Colonel Waller Tazewell Patton nearly a year before. Today in the Confederate portion of a cemetery in Winchester, Virginia--a town that changed hands seventy-two times during the war--is a statue dedicated on June 6, 1879, "in memory of the 398 Virginia soldiers lying in the cemetery who fell in defense of Constitutional Liberty and sovereignty of their state
from 1861-1865 a.d."
Nearby is the simple grave of the Patton brothers, lying among friends and fellow soldiers. The tombstone reads, "In Christ alone perfectly content." Regarding Colonel W. Tazewell Patton, 7th Virginia Regiment, it speaks of a Patton "who fell mortally wounded in the charge of Pickett's division at Gettysburg on the 3rd of July, 1863 in the 29th year of his age"; under Colonel George S. Patton, 22nd Virginia Regiment, it recalls one "who gave his life in Command of his brigade in defense of Winchester on the 19th of September, 1864 in the 32nd year of his age."
BORN OF DISTINCTION
The Patton sons were all either killed, wounded, or otherwise affected by the Civil War.
--Ruth Ellen Patton Totten
It is said that a Patton has fought in nearly every conflict in America's history; yet the first Patton, one Robert Patton, was not a military man but a tobacco exporter from South Carolina, whose name first turns up on a deed in Fredericksburg, Virginia, in 1771. It has been established with considerable certainty that the name was an alias: the young man who called himself Robert Patton, then a popular last name in Scotland, was actually a wanted criminal in the old country. Like so many immigrants of those times, he had set out for America to leave his past behind. From such humble beginnings the family over the next two hundred years would make an indelible mark on the American landscape.
The Patton name has inspired countless literary endeavors, including many books and articles, published especially over the last fifty years. The story of Patton has been chronicled on television and in major motion pictures, including Patton, starring the award-winning actor George C. Scott. The name has been brought into the collective consciousness of America and much of the world through the power of Hollywood, with its impact across borders and languages.
An epic major motion picture that wins numerous awards will be seen by hundreds of millions of people around the globe, but it is the story being told that captures the imagination. The Patton saga is just such a story. The leading character is bigger than life, certainly as enhanced by the motion picture screen, which conveys the power and majesty of a persona of inspiring quality, crushing the enemies of freedom and democracy.
While the story of one general and hero is a central part of Patton history, it is not the only one. Importantly and significantly, there is more. The full story involves a son who also became a general, who participated in two of our most controversial wars, Korea and Vietnam. The fact is, the complete Patton military story ends not with General George S. Patton, Jr., but with his son, a general who fought in wars where the enemy was elusive as were the solutions to the problems facing America in the post-World War II era. Telling the story of Major General George S. Patton requires, however, not only recognizing the career of his father, the
famous field commander of World War II, but going back to the beginning, to set the scene.
America during the Colonial period was a place where new ideas flourished, where strangers and newcomers banded together to form communities; the young country was flexing its new-found power and allegiance to itself instead of the old country. With just such a backdrop Robert Patton established himself in the Fredericksburg area, ingratiating himself with the local citizens while running a tobacco business. Interestingly, whereas many men of his day fought in the Revolutionary War, Patton did not volunteer, preferring to remain friendly with both the British and Americans alike. During the war, however, Patton killed a British officer in a tavern altercation and was forced to keep a low profile for the remainder of the conflict.
Robert Patton was, if nothing else, a resourceful soul, undaunted by circumstance, who in the late 1770s would marry the daughter of General Hugh
Mercer, a close friend of George Washington. The union produced six children; one in particular, John Mercer Patton, went on to a distinguished career, including service in the United States Congress and as the acting governor of Virginia. He and his wife, Peggy French Williams, had twelve children, nine of whom, eight boys and one girl, lived to adulthood.
Seven sons of John and Peggy Mercer Patton would eventually join the Confederacy. The Civil War not only pitted the South against the North in America's greatest tragedy but drew into its wide net members of nearly every family, particularly in the South. The Pattons were no exception, feeling honor-bound to fight, and doing so with a high degree of dedication and bravery. Whether viewed from a Northern or Southern perspective, it was an especially cruel conflict, setting brother against brother and producting horrific and deadly battlefield technology. The famed "minie ball," as an example, designed in 1849 by C. E. Minie, a French Army captain, accounted for 90 percent of the casualties; another 8 percent were caused by
increasingly powerful and accurate artillery.
The Civil War, in which the Pattons played a significant role, was especially hard on the family. Ruth Ellen once said, "The Patton sons were all either killed, wounded, or otherwise affected by the Civil War." In addition
to splitting families, the war split the military. By 1861, it is reported, 820 graduates of the United States Military Academy at West Point were serving in the armies of both the North and South, though more than 75 percent remained
loyal to the Northern cause.
The Pattons, as Virginians and loyal to the South, fought on familiar ground. Virginia evolved as the leading theater of the Civil War; battles, engagements, and campaigns in Virginia exceeded those of any other state, including Tennessee. By war's end just under one-third of all military actions had occurred in Virginia, and extant reports from the field--including specific indications of their movements in battle by generals "Stonewall" Jackson and R. S. Ewell, among others--mention the Pattons in locations throughout the state.
One particular Patton, the fourth child of John and Peggy, was given the name George Smith; he was the first in a line of Pattons with the same first
name. Born in Fredericksburg, Virginia, in June 1833, he would eventually attend the Virginia Military Institute, where he graduated in 1852. After VMI, Patton set up a law practice and later formed a volunteer militia company, the Kanawha Rifles, in which he assumed the rank of captain. This company became
Company H of the 22nd Virginia Infantry when it was activated in late April 1861. When the entire regiment was sworn into the Confederate service, Patton became a lieutenant colonel and was ordered to report to Brigadier General Henry Wise, a past Virginia governor and now commander of the Army of the Kanawha.
Patton fought courageously. He was wounded in 1862 but returned to the war, to be killed in the third battle of Winchester, often called the battle of Opequon, in September 1864. "At the time Patton was killed in action, his commission as a general in the Confederate Army was in the mail," said Ruth Ellen. It was the second death of a son in the war for the Pattons, who had lost Colonel Waller Tazewell Patton nearly a year before. Today in the Confederate portion of a cemetery in Winchester, Virginia--a town that changed hands seventy-two times during the war--is a statue dedicated on June 6, 1879, "in memory of the 398 Virginia soldiers lying in the cemetery who fell in defense of Constitutional Liberty and sovereignty of their state
from 1861-1865 a.d."
Nearby is the simple grave of the Patton brothers, lying among friends and fellow soldiers. The tombstone reads, "In Christ alone perfectly content." Regarding Colonel W. Tazewell Patton, 7th Virginia Regiment, it speaks of a Patton "who fell mortally wounded in the charge of Pickett's division at Gettysburg on the 3rd of July, 1863 in the 29th year of his age"; under Colonel George S. Patton, 22nd Virginia Regiment, it recalls one "who gave his life in Command of his brigade in defense of Winchester on the 19th of September, 1864 in the 32nd year of his age."
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Product details
- Publisher : Dell (July 11, 2000)
- Language : English
- Mass Market Paperback : 416 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0440235723
- ISBN-13 : 978-0440235729
- Item Weight : 7.2 ounces
- Dimensions : 4.25 x 1.5 x 7 inches
-
Best Sellers Rank:
#4,766,541 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #40,760 in World War II History (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
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5.0 out of 5 stars
Compelling enough to make you think we as a nation are heading down hill over the last couple decades
Reviewed in the United States on May 29, 2016Verified Purchase
Americans or any nationality for that matter should take the time to read about the Pattons. Then, from most who read it, you will think twice about how we are changing as a society, from the days of the Pattons (and other great families) to a whinny gimme gimme society. We must begin to change our attitudes about what is owed to us, and instead think of what we can do for one another.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 20, 2015
Verified Purchase
I read this on the heels of reading two other books about Patton; one by O'Reilly, which was my introduction to O'Reillly as an author, and the other called Target: Patton by Wilcox, which seems to be the source material for the O'Reilly book. I knew little about Patton so I came into these fairly objectively.
This Sobel book is interesting because of its content but has some deficiencies. First of all, the font is so small I can hardly read it. It makes a decent narrative challenging because all the text looks like footnotes or quotes.
Second, and most significant, the organization is choppy. Even half way through, the author continues to be very confusing about who he's talking about....I surmise there were 3 Pattons, George S. Patton JR, who is the famous wwII general, George Patton, who is his son and also was an accomplished general, and I guess George Patton who was juniors Dad. You follow this? Neither did I. The author mixes these around frequently so that he'll refer to George Patton, Patton, and George S. Patton interchangeably and frankly it is only by context and the time and events associated with the information that I've been able to figure out which one he's talking about.
There is quite a bit of interesting material and there, of course, is some interesting anecdotal stuff about the Pattons, such as George (the younger) almost failing out of West Point and Patton (the elder) advocating for him based on the fact that he also nearly failed for the same reasons; the personalities of other family members, the relationship between the father and son. There is far, far more information about the person and general Patton (WWII) in the Wilcox book.
Mr. Sobel is completely dismissive of the assassination theories but he does not do himself or the detractors of these theories any justice. First off he dismisses it as complete nonsense, then when he later discusses the actual accident and death it is restricted to a few pages. Entire books painstakingly researched exist that contain vastly more information about the death of Patton than there is total information in the Sobel book....by that I mean that Sobel's entire treatment of the Fighting Pattons is less thorough than books which focus just on the death of Patton. Figure it out for yourself. 3-5 pages about the death vs. 300 pages, footnotes, detailed interviews, obituaries, FOA research, chronicles, archives, forensics. Which one addresses the death more thoroughly? There are brief comments by several people dismissing any talk of the accident and Mr. Sobel crows about the fact that only he has interviewed 2 of the 3 people who were actually there -Hap Gay and Woodring, the driver, but these are scantily addressed. There is virtually no real investigative work exploring numerous other aspects of the accident - Douglas Bazata's alleged role, the disappearance of the intoxicated driver of the car that hit Patton, irregularities about the vehicle, the fact that many reports about it vanished, mysterious bystanders who vanished as well, and the interviews of numerous other people throughout the military and government who really beg to differ with Mr. Sobel's blithe assertion that this was nonsense. Dismissing an assassination theory with this degree of research would be like saying he talked with Abe and Mary Todd Lincoln and no one else did, hence there was no conspiracy. Or that he talked with Connolly, Jacki-O, and the driver and ergo there was no irregularity in the JFK assassination. What about all the other evidence - forensics, witnesses, confessions, masterminds, and so forth? For example there are real and legitimate questions about the nature of Patton's injury. Why was Hap Gay still sitting in his seat while Patton had been hurtled forward to the partition of the passenger compartment, then hurled back into Gay's lap? Do the math. That makes no sense. There were no lap or shoulder belts then.
So from the perspective of an interesting book about an interesting family this is a valuable addition as biography.
As far as a detailed scholarly approach to the history of General George S. Patton, the WWII general, it is sketchy and in no way equals the thoroughness of Mr. Wilcox's book.
This Sobel book is interesting because of its content but has some deficiencies. First of all, the font is so small I can hardly read it. It makes a decent narrative challenging because all the text looks like footnotes or quotes.
Second, and most significant, the organization is choppy. Even half way through, the author continues to be very confusing about who he's talking about....I surmise there were 3 Pattons, George S. Patton JR, who is the famous wwII general, George Patton, who is his son and also was an accomplished general, and I guess George Patton who was juniors Dad. You follow this? Neither did I. The author mixes these around frequently so that he'll refer to George Patton, Patton, and George S. Patton interchangeably and frankly it is only by context and the time and events associated with the information that I've been able to figure out which one he's talking about.
There is quite a bit of interesting material and there, of course, is some interesting anecdotal stuff about the Pattons, such as George (the younger) almost failing out of West Point and Patton (the elder) advocating for him based on the fact that he also nearly failed for the same reasons; the personalities of other family members, the relationship between the father and son. There is far, far more information about the person and general Patton (WWII) in the Wilcox book.
Mr. Sobel is completely dismissive of the assassination theories but he does not do himself or the detractors of these theories any justice. First off he dismisses it as complete nonsense, then when he later discusses the actual accident and death it is restricted to a few pages. Entire books painstakingly researched exist that contain vastly more information about the death of Patton than there is total information in the Sobel book....by that I mean that Sobel's entire treatment of the Fighting Pattons is less thorough than books which focus just on the death of Patton. Figure it out for yourself. 3-5 pages about the death vs. 300 pages, footnotes, detailed interviews, obituaries, FOA research, chronicles, archives, forensics. Which one addresses the death more thoroughly? There are brief comments by several people dismissing any talk of the accident and Mr. Sobel crows about the fact that only he has interviewed 2 of the 3 people who were actually there -Hap Gay and Woodring, the driver, but these are scantily addressed. There is virtually no real investigative work exploring numerous other aspects of the accident - Douglas Bazata's alleged role, the disappearance of the intoxicated driver of the car that hit Patton, irregularities about the vehicle, the fact that many reports about it vanished, mysterious bystanders who vanished as well, and the interviews of numerous other people throughout the military and government who really beg to differ with Mr. Sobel's blithe assertion that this was nonsense. Dismissing an assassination theory with this degree of research would be like saying he talked with Abe and Mary Todd Lincoln and no one else did, hence there was no conspiracy. Or that he talked with Connolly, Jacki-O, and the driver and ergo there was no irregularity in the JFK assassination. What about all the other evidence - forensics, witnesses, confessions, masterminds, and so forth? For example there are real and legitimate questions about the nature of Patton's injury. Why was Hap Gay still sitting in his seat while Patton had been hurtled forward to the partition of the passenger compartment, then hurled back into Gay's lap? Do the math. That makes no sense. There were no lap or shoulder belts then.
So from the perspective of an interesting book about an interesting family this is a valuable addition as biography.
As far as a detailed scholarly approach to the history of General George S. Patton, the WWII general, it is sketchy and in no way equals the thoroughness of Mr. Wilcox's book.
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5.0 out of 5 stars
Voices from the past, from Patton family members to honorable comrade soldiers, tell the truth in this revealing narrative.
Reviewed in the United States on September 23, 2014Verified Purchase
The American flag is a symbol of patriotic American values, principles and freedom.
It takes willing patriotic men, to live, and fight for their country.
`The Fighting Pattons,' is an honest, historical portrait of U.S. Army General George S. Patton, Jr., and his son, Major General George S. Patton. Their combined military service adds up to seventy years of dedication to their country.
'The Fighting Pattons,' serves as an official family biography, and is inspiring, fascinating, memorable, and exciting memoir of father and son.
The two fighting Pattons, were engaged in five American conflicts, that shaped the 20th century, from the punitive action taken in Mexico in 1916 through Vietnam.
"The Third Army moved further and faster and engaged more divisions in less time than any other army in the history of the United States, possibly in the history of the world." (81,522 square miles of territory in nine months had been liberated or conquered by Patton's Third Army)
"The object of war is not to die for your country, but to make the other bastard die for his."
"We herd sheep. We drive cattle. We lead people. Lead me, follow me or get out of my way."
---- General George S. Patton, Jr.
"On the atomic battlefield leadership must be personal. Troops must be aware of the commander's presence and know that he accepts the same risks of horrible and vaporized death that they do. It is the task of leadership to strengthen the will of the troops."
---- Major General George S. Patton
It takes willing patriotic men, to live, and fight for their country.
`The Fighting Pattons,' is an honest, historical portrait of U.S. Army General George S. Patton, Jr., and his son, Major General George S. Patton. Their combined military service adds up to seventy years of dedication to their country.
'The Fighting Pattons,' serves as an official family biography, and is inspiring, fascinating, memorable, and exciting memoir of father and son.
The two fighting Pattons, were engaged in five American conflicts, that shaped the 20th century, from the punitive action taken in Mexico in 1916 through Vietnam.
"The Third Army moved further and faster and engaged more divisions in less time than any other army in the history of the United States, possibly in the history of the world." (81,522 square miles of territory in nine months had been liberated or conquered by Patton's Third Army)
"The object of war is not to die for your country, but to make the other bastard die for his."
"We herd sheep. We drive cattle. We lead people. Lead me, follow me or get out of my way."
---- General George S. Patton, Jr.
"On the atomic battlefield leadership must be personal. Troops must be aware of the commander's presence and know that he accepts the same risks of horrible and vaporized death that they do. It is the task of leadership to strengthen the will of the troops."
---- Major General George S. Patton
2 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on November 12, 2016
Verified Purchase
What a wonderful book. I read it to my husband on a long road trip. He is a vet and I am an Army brat. The parts on Vietnam Nam were particularly good.
Reviewed in the United States on August 14, 2015
Verified Purchase
Illuminating
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Reviewed in the United States on December 9, 2013
Verified Purchase
The voice of (now the late) George S. Patton the younger - clear to hear because of his words in italics.
2 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on February 3, 2017
Verified Purchase
Just couldn't quite get into it.
Solid 3-star rating.
I would like to provide textual content on that Rating as part of this Review, however am unable to do so. The ACDLT has restricted ability to Comment or Reply (without any prior warning, any specific notification, any identification of specific alleged problems or appeal).
That being so, an inability to respond to Review comments by others (positive, negative, indifferent) would be unfair to myself and others.
But it is a solid 3-star book in this genre.
Solid 3-star rating.
I would like to provide textual content on that Rating as part of this Review, however am unable to do so. The ACDLT has restricted ability to Comment or Reply (without any prior warning, any specific notification, any identification of specific alleged problems or appeal).
That being so, an inability to respond to Review comments by others (positive, negative, indifferent) would be unfair to myself and others.
But it is a solid 3-star book in this genre.
One person found this helpful
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