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03-01-11, 01:41 PM | #751 | |
Navy Seal
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03-01-11, 01:52 PM | #752 |
Frogman
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Muncie, IN
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Currently reading Les Miserables by Hugo as well as Machiavelli's Prince and Discourses on Livy simultaneously. (I'm in a rhetorical criticism class).
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03-01-11, 03:05 PM | #753 |
Stowaway
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03-01-11, 05:51 PM | #754 |
Lucky Jack
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From Leningrad to Berlin
Dutch Volunteers in the service of the German Waffen SS 1941-1945 By Perry Pierik
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Dr Who rest in peace 1963-2017. To borrow Davros saying...I NAME YOU CHIBNALL THE DESTROYER OF DR WHO YOU KILLED IT! |
03-05-11, 12:55 PM | #755 | |
Ace of the Deep
Join Date: Jan 2006
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Another factor is that the Americans started really deploying rafting in their Permits in 1960 or so, while the Soviets started in 1972. That ensured a large glut of noisy Soviet submarines, and that pulled up the "national average" (and thus the American perception) of Soviet submarine noise and vice versa. A third factor is that the Soviets seem to know when they are losing more than the West gives them credit for. In Blind Man's Bluff, there is a section where the Soviet Admiral let slip he was near USS Dace in a Victor I. Sontag tries to make it an issue of who trailed whom, and of course the American, which had an acoustical superiority, and who presumably waited in an ambush position, had the edge in that fight. IMO, Sontag misses the point, which is that the Soviets had managed a counterdetection, even if it was late, and the Americans don't seem to know about it. Winning is better than losing, but in ASW warfare, managing to know when you've lost is a massive step up from not knowing, and not realizing that your victory is not quite complete is in itself a fair loss. |
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03-06-11, 11:26 PM | #756 | |
Born to Run Silent
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I really enjoyed Les Miserables, good book. Jean Valjean, great protaganist, great story. Just finished Girl with the Dragon Tatoo and Girl Who Played with Fire.
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03-07-11, 09:15 AM | #757 |
Kaiser Bill's batman
Join Date: May 2010
Location: AN72
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I've just started reading Robert Mason's Chickenhawk. First read it about 22 years ago and thought it was possibly one of the best books I'd ever read - well 22 years later I'm still thinking that!
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03-09-11, 11:45 PM | #758 | |
Helmsman
Join Date: Apr 2005
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If you had to choose between these two books, which would you go with? |
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03-10-11, 12:27 AM | #759 | |
Lucky Sailor
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Rome
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Winning without thinking they know about it leads to complacency in tech development, while knowing you just got goosed forces you to strive ahead in new technology. |
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03-10-11, 06:17 AM | #760 |
Ocean Warrior
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I'm one of these guys who read several books at one - depending on my mood. Currently I am reading:
- Terry Pratchett: Moving Pictures - Karl Alman: Graue Wölfe in Blauer See (Grey Wolfes in the blue ocean) - about the u-boats in the Mediterranian Sea - Jared Diamond: Collapse - Generation Kill by Evan Wright the first 3 in German, the last one in English |
03-10-11, 08:48 AM | #761 |
Kaiser Bill's batman
Join Date: May 2010
Location: AN72
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I wish I'd paid much, much, more attention at school with regard to learning German. The only thing I can remember properly, and this goes for French also, is that the public transport infrastructure must be fantastic - as the question: Wo ist der Bahnhof/Bushaltestelle? (Where is the train station/bus stop?)
The answers were always: Der Bahnhof/Bushaltestelle ist die zweite/dritte Straße rechts/links. (The train station/bus stop is the second/third road on the right/left.) A bus stop or train station always within three streets!!! Anyway, back to books - still reading Chickenhawk
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03-10-11, 09:24 AM | #762 | |
Navy Seal
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03-12-11, 10:30 PM | #763 | |
Helmsman
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: California
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http://www.tacopshq.com/MBX/Globalth...DIA-SOSUS.html Say, do you know the difference between these two books http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/159...pf_rd_i=507846 Naval Institute Guide to Combat Fleets of the World: Their Ships, Aircraft, and Systems Eric Wertheim and http://www.amazon.com/Naval-Institut...d=ZHFYMC7LIF3Z The Naval Institute Guide to Combat Fleets of the World 2002-2003: Their Ships, Aircraft, and Systems A. D., III Baker Im confused because they both seem to be one and the same book, but with different authors. The one by Eric Wertheim is also more current (2007). Perhaps it is the same project but maybe A.D. III Baker no longer is writing ?? So Wertheim took over the helm, so to speak. Just a guess.. Last edited by Buck_O; 03-13-11 at 04:42 PM. |
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03-14-11, 10:17 AM | #764 |
Stowaway
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The Last Patrol
I imagine that this title has appeared on these pages before but it is definately worth a reminder.
The Last Patrol by Harry Holmes details the loss of every American submarine in WW2 and should be a must for every sub simmer's library. http://www.amazon.com/Last-Patrol-Ha...0115065&sr=8-1 Was reaquainted with The Last Patrol recently when SWMBO actually asked a submarine related questions pertaining to some romance novel she was reading and I had to go and look up an answer. |
03-14-11, 11:45 AM | #765 | |
Navy Seal
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... but damn those are expensive... Anyways I take some of the stuff written for Harpoon with a grain of salt, not that its inaccurate but that it could be altered for "mass distribution", however there are times that its the only stuff written on something. |
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