Read it in books
Jun. 3rd, 2007 06:02 pm(I'm not counting the damn things because I'll end up looking like some thicky)
Even so:
'Death traps' by Belton Y. Cooper is an engineering-BOfH's-eye-view of US tank warfare from D-Day to Berlin. It boils down to 'The hardware's (specifically the M4 Sherman) shite. An aircraft engine in a tank? What cowboys put that in? I'll all have to come out.' Though that leaves out the grimly spot-on descriptions of the thing's failure-modes when shot at by the other side. Fine stuff.
'The Box' by Marc Levinson. A history of the shipping container. Yes, really.
Even so:
'Death traps' by Belton Y. Cooper is an engineering-BOfH's-eye-view of US tank warfare from D-Day to Berlin. It boils down to 'The hardware's (specifically the M4 Sherman) shite. An aircraft engine in a tank? What cowboys put that in? I'll all have to come out.' Though that leaves out the grimly spot-on descriptions of the thing's failure-modes when shot at by the other side. Fine stuff.
'The Box' by Marc Levinson. A history of the shipping container. Yes, really.
no subject
Date: 2007-06-03 10:33 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 09:57 am (UTC)If you ever find one (you won't, they're rare as tramps' teeth) then the mid-90s HMSO-published series on tank history are an excellent read (try "The Universal Tank"). Sadly (and obviously) UK-centric, but it explains how the UK came to be so good at tank design, then so bad, then finally good at it again. It all gets a bit R101 at times -- plucky private enterprise gets it right, Minitankfarben screws it up.
no subject
Date: 2007-06-04 10:23 am (UTC)The embroidery keeps it readable, although even then it sometimes clunks along and could really have done with a sound Editing. It's still a memoir and as such features an Unreliable Narrator.