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The Mosin-Nagant Rifle (4th Revised and Expanded Edition)

by Terence W. Lapin

This is a collector's guide to the "3-line rifle, Model 1891," later known as the "Mosin-system 7.62 mm Magazine Rifle, Model of 1891," and commonly referred to as the "Mosin-Nagant," in the West. Covered in-depth, are the differences, commonalities, and identifying features, for the numerous models, from the various producers. The Mosin-Nagant, rifle, and its 7.62x54R cartridge, have been important in history, from the Boxer Rebellion, and the Russo-Japanese War, to the most recent war in Iraq. This span of more than 1 hundred years has firmly established the Mosin-Nagant, and the 7.62x54R cartridge, as the most successful weapon system in modern history.

My Life in the Irish Brigade: The Civil War Memoirs of Private William Mccarter, 116th Pennsylvania Infantry

by Geoffrey O'Brien Kevin E. O'Brien William McCarter

The Civil War Memoirs of Private William McCarter, 116 Pennsylvania Infantry William McCarter, a 21-year-old Irish immigrant, was present at the storming of Marye's Heights at the battle of Fredericksburg and left behind observations of several prominent Union personalities as well as daily life in the Army of the Potomac.

The Winged Watchman (Young America Book Club)

by Hilda Van Stockum

This acclaimed story of World War II is rich in suspense, characterization, plot and spiritual truth. Every element of occupied Holland is united in a story of courage and hope: a hidden Jewish child, an "underdiver," a downed RAF pilot, an imaginative, daring underground hero, and the small things of family life which surprisingly carry on in the midst of oppression. The Verhagen family, who live in the old windmill called the Winged Watchman, are a memorable set of individuals whose lives powerfully demonstrate the resilience of those who suffer but do not lose faith.

The Small War of Sergeant Donkey (Living History Library)

by Maureen Daly Wesley Dennis

Donkeys by the hundreds! Twelve-year-old Chico Filippo, whose own donkeys were confiscated years before by the German army, can t stay away from the newly set up American Remount Depot. Here, in the last months of World War II in Italy, thousands of supply mules and donkeys are processed and sent onto the fierce mountain fighting in the Apennines. One of the handlers introduces Chico to a small courageous animal the boy names Sergeant Donkey. Drawn into friendship and then into unexpected danger, Chico must demonstrate his own simple courage. More than an animal or war story, this short book has a depth of truth about people of different ages and nationalities who still share a common love of the land and of human dignity. Age 8-up

Enemy Brothers: A Story of World War II

by Constance Savery

THEY MADE A BARGAIN... They ate their meal by the fire. A little black cat came mewing and pawing for fish. "How many lives has a cat?" Dym asked, tickling her gently under her furry chin. Tony would not answer. "Nine," said Dym. "So have you. I mean that if you run away as often as nine times you won't get into trouble when you are caught. But the tenth time you are caught running away there will be a row, a really serious row. Understand?" Tony scowled. "You've lost three of your lives already. That leaves six, doesn't it?" There were disadvantages, Tony found, in a vow of eternal silence. For example, one had no power to protest violently against such a flagrant injustice such as this. He turned his eyes glowing with indignation on Dym. "You think that's not square, eh?" But Tony was wrathfully silent. Dym's grave young face broke suddenly into a smile. Though Tony would not have owned it for the world, he liked to see his captor smile. "Not going to be tricked into speaking to me, are you, Max? I'm afraid I did it on purpose-I wanted to see whether I could make you speak. Very good, then; we'll start from tonight. You have nine lives and no more. Is that fair warning?" Tony did not answer in words. In his heart he thought it was fair enough. Thus a private war declared between Tony and the inhabitants of the White Priory. British airman Dym Ingleford is convinced that young Max Eckermann is his brother, Anthony, who was kidnapped years before. Raised in the Nazi ideology, Tony has by chance tumbled into British hands. Dym has brought him back, at least temporarily, to the family he neither remembers nor will acknowledge as his own. As Tony uses his nine attempts to escape, his stubborn anger is whittled away by the patient kindness he finds at the White Priory. Then, just as he is resigning himself to the English family, a new chance suddenly opens for him to return home-to Germany! ENEMY BROTHERS, written in the early years of World War II before the United States joined the Allied forces, is a story of faith in the face of uncertainty. As the events and relationships develop, the reader is given an inside view of the confusion war brings and the triumph of the human spirit in the midst of it. Ages 10-up

The Confederate Fiddle

by Jeanne Williams

A Civil War Story of High Adventure In 1863 Brownsville, Texas, was the only port open to the South. Vin Clayburn joins a wagon train in Missouri taking cotton, the Confederacy's money crop, to the Brownsville port for export to France, England, and Germany. This deeply moving and adventurous book is a story of loyalty— the devotion of Vin Clayburn to home and belief—even to the sacrifice of a prized family violin. Vin longs to be like his dashing older brother in the Confederate Army instead of a driver in a cotton train traveling from Missouri to Brownsville. Though he is determined to see it through, he resents the routine job of carrying supplies and missing "a hero's glory." He learns, however, that his unglamorous task involves thrills, courage and daring and—even more difficult—understanding and respect for those whose views are different from his own. Most of all, in a compelling climax, Vin comes to realize that there are many different kinds of heroes.

Texas Granite: Story of a World War II Hero

by Mary Hartman

Jack commanded a Marine Company during the bloody battle for Iwo Jima. There he earned the nation is highest decoration, The Medal of Honor, posthumously. Before the Marines there was football and baseball at Ennis High School, Texas Military College, Baylor University, and then football with the New York Giants.

Tongue of War: From Pearl Harbor to Nagasaki

by Tony Barnstone

These poems, many written in forms such as the sonnet, are inspired by historical situations and accounts--letters, oral histories, news reports, etc.--of individuals from both sides of the Pacific theater of World War II, including the home fronts.

Marika

by Andrea Cheng

"Although she has been raised Catholic, Marika learns how dangerous it is to be of Jewish heritage and living in Hungary during World War II." - from the book

Say We Won and Get Out: George D. Aiken and the Vietnam War

by Stephen C. Terry

George D. Aiken, a hillside farmer and a liberal Republican Depression-era Governor, rose to national prominence as a leading GOP U. S. Senator and enduring critic of the Vietnam War from 1962-1975. Aiken’s long-standing friendship with Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield, an unheard of political alliance in today’s sharply divided Washington, forged bi-partisan opposition to the war. Aiken was neither “hawk” nor “dove”, but a “wise owl” who spoke his mind forcefully and bluntly to all against the war. He advised President Johnson to declare that the U. S. won the Vietnam War and to get out. Later, Aiken told President Nixon to stop bombing in Cambodia or he couldn’t be elected “dogcatcher.” This is pure Aiken speaking truth to power for ending America’s most controversial war, a common-sense voice that the Nation sorely needs today. This book demonstrates that bi-partisan Senate leadership has worked in the past and must be present in order to solve urgent national problems. Senator Aiken was a catalyst for forging consensus on issues from civil rights to foreign policy by being open-minded to all ideas that would help his constituents. Aiken’s philosophy was always to help people first. He never made decisions based on his party, a lost art in the current political environment. A Senator like George Aiken today would help show how to restore bi-partisanship.

Brief Heroes and Histories

by Barbara Holland

Brief stories on eminent persons like Robin Hood, Cleopatra, Karl Marx, and on historical moments like creation of Germany, and how the West changed its women.

A Northern Thunder: Will Parker's North Korean Mission

by Andy Harp

Author Andy Harp has created a crackerjack military/techno thriller that features Will Parker, a character at least as interesting as Tom Clancy's Jack Ryan and who, at times, reminds readers of an updated, more serious, better-grounded, American version of Ian Fleming's James Bond. Here's Harp's A Northern Thunder in a nutshell: North Korea, a Communist nation in desperate financial straits, concentrates its military resources on a scientist bent on swiftly creating missile technology that can: a) take out other countries' satellites in space; b) disseminate nuclear payloads to all parts of the earth, thus giving it the power to extort trillions from the rest of the world; and c) be sold to terrorists and rogue nations at exceedingly high prices. To protect its investment, North Korea takes no chances. A super-skilled North Korean assassin with the latest lethal methods is dispatched to secretly kill the scientist's worldwide competitors. Meantime, the U.S. military plucks Marine reservist Will Parker from retirement. His mission? Penetrate dangerous North Korea, and flesh out its leading military scientist from an entourage of three doppelgangers-Parker roomed with the real guy his freshman year in college. At the same time, with the help of a North Korean asset, the FBI finally connects the dots, and starts on the trail of the North Korean assassin, hoping to catch him before he kills again. It's a corker of a well-paced story that makes you feel like you're there. And why not? Harp, a retired USMC colonel and longtime member of the Reserves, gives his protagonist an in-depth backstory and special set of characteristics that a broad audience can relate to and appreciate. He tells the story of a longtime military man relearning to do the right thing for the right reasons. He populates A Northern Thunder with some mind-blowing military technology-all little known, but actually in existence. And his North Korean theme and milieu couldn't be more timely or more important-and will remain so for decades. Plus, Harp's A Northern Thunder springs straight from the real world. The threat to the world's satellites is acutely and officially recognized by the United States, among others. With tons of action, intrigue, character, romance, and deception, A Northern Thunder has everything a good spy story needs. It's a riveting military thriller/spy novel, written in the much-praised tradition of Tom Clancy's very best work.

A Brief History of the World in 47 Borders: Surprising Stories Behind the Lines on Our Maps

by Jonn Elledge

#1 International Bestseller Every border tells a surprising story in this uncommonly enlightening history that will change the way you understand the world “A novel and fascinating perspective on world history.”—Bill Bryson, author of A Short History of Nearly Everything Many lines on the map are worth far more than a thousand words, going well beyond merely marking divisions between nations. In this eye-opening investigation into the most remarkable points on the map, a single boundary might, upon closer inspection, reveal eons of history—from epic tales of conquest, treaties, and alliances to intimate, all-too-human stories of love, greed, and folly. Sometimes rooted in physical geography, sometimes entirely arbitrary, none of the lines we know today were inevitable, and all might have looked quite different if not for the intricate interplay of chance and ambition. By listening to the stories these borders have to tell, we can learn how political identities are shaped, why the world’s boundaries look the way they do—and what they tell us about our world and ourselves. From the very first maps in Egypt to the Roman attempts to define the boundaries of civilization, from the profound shift in meaning of the Mason–Dixon line to the secret British-French agreement to carve up the Ottoman Empire during the First World War, and from the dark consequences of Detroit’s city limits to the intriguing reason why landlocked Bolivia still maintains a navy, this is a singular look at human history—told through its most spellbinding border stories.

The Complete Hammer's Slammers (Vol #1)

by David Drake Gene Wolfe Vincent Di Fate

This is Volume One of a three volume set presenting for the first time the genre-defining Slammers series in a uniform hardcover set. WITH A VETERAN'S EYE for harsh and gritty details of war, David Drake depicts a futuristic analog of Vietnam-era tank combat in his Hammer's Slammers fiction. Upon this tactical foundation, Drake uses historical metaphor to provide a rich and detailed future-history that is both unique and strangely familiar. The characters that make up The Hammer's Regiment are neither cartoon heroes nor propaganda villains; rather they are competent professionals engaged in a deadly business. The inevitable conflicts between policy, necessity, and human nature are often at the forefront of the Slammers narratives, and it is this rich fusion of elements that makes Drake's Slammers fiction instantly identifiable and utterly compelling. The Hammer's Slammers series is some of the most important and influential work of military SF. The Vietnam War made indelible marks on the science fiction genre, and Drake's service with the Blackhorse regiment during the war gives his fiction a unique perspective. It is this perspective that is sometimes lacking in military SF, and one that makes Drake's work so important to the science fiction genre as a whole. This first volume collects the existing short fiction, along with the background material from the original Slammers collection. The new story in this volume, "A Death in Peacetime," chronicles an important event in the Hammer's Regiment history... an event that has been implied, but never fully explained... until now.

All American History, Volume II: The Civil War to the 21st Century Student Reader

by Celeste W. Rakes

The book contains a full year’s curriculum in 32 weekly lessons. Each lesson contains three sections examining: the atmosphere in which the event occurred, the event itself, and the impact this event had on the future of America.

Victory In The Pacific

by Albert Marrin

Covers events from the surprise attack on Pearl Harbor through the battles of Midway, Guadalcanal, the Solomon Islands, Savo Island, the Doolittle raid on Tokyo, Corregidor Island, Leyte Gulf, Iwo Jima , and Okinawa. In each case, readers see the battles through the eyes of the men who were there, landing on the beaches, running raids in PT boats, dodging kamikaze bombers, and flying missions over Japan. In an easily accessible style, Marrin relates not only the important details of these conquests but also explains the military strategies of both the Allied forces and the Japanese. Readers get an overarching view of the war that helps to bring understanding especially as American forces drew increasingly closer to Japan and the Japanese grew ever more determined to fight to the end. Marrin helps readers to understand the Japanese mindset that made surrender impossible and ultimately led to the decision to drop the atomic bomb in the interests of saving millions of lives. For the young adult reader, or even an adult unfamiliar with this period of WWII history, this book provides a sobering but inspiring look of the men and women, the nations and ideologies, that battled over half a century ago in the Pacific theater. Illustrated with diagrams, maps and photographs.

The War Over Iraq: Saddam's Tyranny and America's Mission

by Lawrence F. Kaplan William Cristol

The importance of how we act.

The Hit

by Jere Hoar

The Hit is the story of the downward spiral of Luke Carr, a Vietnam war veteran, and, at the time of the story's telling, mental patient at a V A hospital in Mississippi. In a series of notebooks written while holed up in his hospital room, Carr relates the tale of his downfall; a recounting of passion, betrayal, and the perfect crime gone wrong. Days before leaving to fight in the Vietnam War, Luke Carr lost the only woman he'd ever loved. He returns from the war to a solitary existence-his only company, a bird dog named Adel--keeping below the radar of a world that no longer makes much sense to him. Beneath this cover, Carr plans the perfect crime. He intends to steal the fabled art collection of his ex-lover's rich husband, a local grandee named Tom Morris. His scheme is fool-proof. Enter Kinnerly Morris, who rekindles an old passion in the dark mind of Luke Carr. An anonymous phone call asking him to carry out a "hit" sets off a series of events that are as unpredictable as they are deadly in this irresistible story about honor, loyalty, betrayal, and revenge.

Yesterday's People

by Goran Simic

These eight stories deal with ordinary people in extraordinary circumstances, war and its aftershocks prominent among them, where the reality is often much more surreal than fiction.

The Shadows Under the Lamp: Essays on September 11 and Afghanistan

by Ronald Creagh Sharif Gemie

This book discusses the history and culture of Afghanistan in the context of the post-September 11 world.

Lumen

by Ben Pastor

Equal parts wartime political intrigue, detective story, psychological thriller and religious mystery, Pastor's debut follows a German army captain and a Chicago priest as they investigate the death of a nun in Nazi-occupied Poland. Stunned by the violence of the occupation and by the ideology of his colleagues, Bora's sense of Prussian duty is tested to the breaking point.

Liar Moon

by Ben Pastor

Praise for Ben Pastor's Lumen: "Pastor's plot is well crafted, her prose sharp. . . . A disturbing mix of detection and reflection."--Publishers Weekly "Rivets the reader with its twist of historical realities. A historical piece, it faithfully reproduces the grim canvas of war. A character study, it captures the thoughts and actions of real people, not stereotypes."--The Free Lance-Star "And don't miss Lumen by Ben Pastor. . . . An interesting, original, and melancholy tale."--Literary Review Italy, September 1943. The Italian government switches sides and declares war on Germany. The north of Italy is controlled by the fascist puppets of Germany; the south liberated by Allied forces fighting their way up the peninsula. Having survived hell on the Russian front, Wehrmacht major and aristocrat Baron Martin von Bora is sent to Verona. He is ordered to investigate the murder of a prominent local fascist: a bizarre death threatening to discredit the regime's public image. The prime suspect is the victim's twenty-eight-year-old widow Clara. Haunted by his record of opposition to SS policies in Russia, Bora must watch his step. Against the backdrop of relentless anti-partisan warfare and the tragedy of the Holocaust, a breathless chase begins. Ben Pastor, born and now back in Italy, lived for thirty years in the United States, working as a university professor in Vermont. The first in the Martin Bora series, Lumen, was published by Bitter Lemon Press in May 2011.

The Green Zone: The Environmental Costs of Militarism

by Barry Sanders

Environmentalism—it’s the word on everyone’s tongue. Reusable shopping bags, hybrid cars, and green home energy solutions allow us to reduce our carbon footprint, but it’s only the tip of the quickly melting iceberg. In the midst of the movement to save the earth, The Green Zone presents a sobering revelation: until we address the attack that the US military is waging on the global environment, the things we do at home won’t change a thing. This new investigation by author and journalist Barry Sanders examines in detail the environmental impact of US military interventions overseas. In a period of unprecedented scrutiny surrounding the social and economic impacts of the defense policies of the US government, Sanders explores a completely different aspect of the situation and positions military activity as the single-greatest contributor to the worldwide environmental crisis, looking at everything from fuel emissions to radioactive waste to defoliation campaigns. Based primarily on research culled from documents released or leaked by the military itself, The Green Zone is the first book to provide a comprehensive examination of the relationship between militarism and ecological destruction. Includes a powerhouse introduction by urban theorist Mike Davis.

Saplings

by Noel Streatfeild

The four Wiltshire children live a comfortable middle-class English life. But as WWII overtakes the country, the family, like so many others, slowly disintegrates. Told from the perspective of the children, Saplings is immensely readable ... a dark inversion of the author's best-known book, the children classic Ballet Shoes (Sunday Telegraph). Laurel, at eleven, was conscious of being happy. She was almost afraid of it'll never be as happy again. When I'm quite old, as old as thirty, I'll come back to this bit of Eastbourne I'll come on the same day in June and remember me now.

The No-Nonsense Guide to Conflict and Peace

by Sabina Lautensach Helen Ware Deanna Iribarnegaray Peter Greener

The twentieth century was the most bloody in history, and already conflict in this century has taken a heavy toll. Most wars are now within countries rather than between states, and often it is civilians that suffer most, especially women and children.This is an invaluable guide for students, peace groups, and activists. It examines the changing types of war, including the war on terror and ethnic conflict such as in Rwanda, the role of diplomacy and the UN, and what steps ordinary people are taking to rebuild communities. It offers ideas and inspiration for creating lasting peace.

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Showing 35,951 through 35,975 of 38,721 results