Books

Acquisitions, Books

Acquisitions

Jeffry Record. The Specter of Munich: Reconsidering the Lessons of Appeasing Hitler. Washington, D.C.: Potomac Books, 2006. Generally speaking, I’m bored by the ritual invocation of Munich every time some foreign crisis dominates the headlines. But it’s not going to stop happening just because it bores me and it’s kinda my area (or adjacent to […]

Books

Unwritten books

[Cross-posted at Revise and Dissent.] I’m often surprised by the books that historians haven’t written. The years I am researching are between two and three generations distant, yet it’s not hard to find (what seem to me to be) big, important topics which deserve to have academic monographs devoted to them, but have somehow been

1910s, 1920s, Books, Maps, Pictures

Come friendly bombs and fall on Stonehenge

A few months ago I looked at some visions of how aerial warfare might improve the city by blowing away ugly developments. Here’s a similar fantasy of better planning through bombing, though the site in question is a rather surprising one: Stonehenge. From Clough Williams-Ellis’s diatribe against the debeautification of the countryside, England and the

Acquisitions, Books

Acquisitions

Neil Hanson. First Blitz: The Secret German Plan to Raze London to the Ground in 1918. London: Doubleday, 2008. This is a thick, new narrative history of the German air raids on Britain in the First World War, concentrating mainly on the aeroplane raids in 1917-8. Although written for a popular audience, it’s based on

1940s, Books

The persistence of fear

Something which continues to surprise me (but probably shouldn’t, by now) is the way that people were evidently still worried, well into the Blitz, that Germany had not yet unleashed its full aerial might against Britain. That is, that despite victory in the Battle of Britain, and at least enduring the first few months of

Books

Hidden treasure

I’ve written before about some of the discoveries one can make while wandering around the ERC Library at Melbourne. (Which used to be the ‘Education Resource Centre Library’ but, after the renovations are complete, will be backronymed into the ‘Eastern Resource Centre’.) I’m sure lots of university libraries have a section like this — at

Acquisitions, Books

Acquisitions

Anthony Burke. Fear of Security: Australia’s Invasion Anxiety. Port Melbourne: Cambridge University Press, 2008. Britain isn’t the only country to go into periodic panics about its vulnerability to invasion, after all. This book ostensibly begins in 1788, but looks like it mostly deals with the Cold War and after. Andrew J. Rotter. Hiroshima: The World’s

1900s, Books, Periodicals, Phantom airships, mystery aeroplanes, and other panics

Herr Martin’s modest proposal

1908 was the year that aviation, and its possible consequences, burst into British consciousness. In July, the British press reported on a long-duration flight over Germany of the Zeppelin LZ4, which proved that controlled lighter than air flight was practical, and in August, on the flights in France of Wilbur Wright, which very publicly proved

Acquisitions, Books

Acquisitions

Stephen Biddle. Military Power: Explaining Victory and Defeat in Modern Battle. Princeton and Oxford, Princeton University Press, 2004. An analytical and numerical approach to working out which side should be victorious in battle. I see nothing in the index to suggest that there’s an answer to the classic dilemma: U.S.S Enterprise vs. a star destroyer,

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