Acquisitions, Books

Acquisitions

I’ve been good, I really have! I haven’t bought any books for ages, since I’ve been economising in advance of the UK trip. But yesterday I went looking for a Shute to take with me, and couldn’t find one, but instead came away with an armful of other books. Midge Gillies. Waiting for Hitler: Voices […]

Australia, Other, Pictures

Airship over North Melbourne

Around Easter, I happened to have a camera on me when an airship was passing overhead, and managed to take a couple of pictures before the camera batteries died. But they didn’t look quite right, and eventually I realised that it was because the airship was too red. Everybody knows, at least subconsciously, that airships

1930s, 1940s, Civil defence, Periodicals, Words

War of words

The other day I came across a fascinating article by H. L. Mencken, the Sage of Baltimore. Mencken was very interested in colloquial English, and to this end penned “War words in England”, published in the February 1944 American Speech, about new words coming into use in the British press as a result of the

Other

Also, are LOLs NPOV?

Mark Connelly has written several very fine books on British military history. He also has an amusingly self-referential Wikipedia entry (emphasis added): Mark Connelly is a Senior Lecturer and Head of the School of History, at the University of Kent in Canterbury. He is also the author of a book on the Second World War

Travel 2007

Web log beg: travel

Since my previous “web log beg” worked so well, here’s another. Because this is my first trip to Europe, and could well be my last for a long time, I’d like to do a bit of travel in September to have a look around (I get kicked out of the college on 3 September to

1930s, 1940s, Periodicals, Words

From blitzkrieg to blitz

[Cross-posted at Revise and Dissent.] The German bombing of London and other British cities between September 1940 and May 1941 is referred to as “the Blitz”, a contemporary term which, if not actually coined by the press, was certainly popularised by it. Blitz is short for blitzkrieg, German for “lightning war”, which was the label

Blogging, tweeting and podcasting

Historic battlefields

A promising new entrant into the military historioblogosphere: Alistair Hollington’s Historic battlefields, who covers 20th century British military history but is particularly interested in First World War unit and individual histories. Alistair’s doing an MA in First World War studies, which looks like a lot of fun. (Via Investigations of a Dog.)

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