| jumjum | November 21st, 2007 10:55 AM | (Sorry for the dp, but the 30-minute edit window is ridiculously short.) Quote:
Originally Posted by Von Mudra
(Post 4046177)
If you want a good book on WW1, look no further then:The Myth of the Great War- John Mosier
Trust me, you won't regret it. | Which reminds me of A Soldier Of The Great War by Mark Helprin. Part is about WWI in th Alps between the Austrians and Italians, and simply jaw-dropping descriptions of what it took to fight on Europe's roof. But more than war, it's about life, heroism, despair, love, loyalty, tenacity, loss, regret, hope. Grand themes, things worth dying for. You know, Literature with a capital "L". Your spirit feels larger for having read it.
Helprin is like some fictional character himself, or at least a character out of WWI: Harvard, Oxford, gets bored with talk and joins British Merchant Marine; emigrates to Israel and joins IDF, first in infantry, then as fighter pilot, and serves in the Yom Kippur War. Becomes a novelist, journalist and think-tank fellow. His path is so classically that of a CIA asset that I'd almost bet my house he's a spook.
vM - I have to dl the program we were talking about to another computer - this is at 90% capacity. |