Thesis

Sounds like a plan

I’m preparing for my PhD confirmation, which means I’m nearly a year in. (Eeep!) This means giving a paper (done), writing a report justifying what I’ve done and plan to do, and appearing before a committee to discuss my report and progress. A cynical viewpoint would be that this is just a hoop-jumping-through exercise which […]

Biographies

J. M. Spaight

I’ve put up a biographical note on the jurist and civil servant J. M. Spaight, an important commentator on airpower issues from before the First World War until after the Second. I should have put this up long ago (Airminded gets quite a few search engine referrals from queries relating to Spaight, and there’s not

Blogging, tweeting and podcasting

It’s official …

[Cross-posted at Revise and Dissent.] … I’m a bad historian! No, well, actually, I have a post included in the latest Carnival of Bad History, which may or may not mean the same thing. Head on over to Hiram Hover’s place and decide for yourself — and while you’re there, make sure you sample the

Acquisitions, Books

Acquisitions

Antony Beevor. The Battle for Spain: The Spanish Civil War 1936-1939. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2006. The Spanish Civil War was a crucial event in British airpower history. I have the first edition of this book, but I haven’t read it yet, so … Andrew Milner, Matthew Ryan and Robert Savage, eds. Imagining the Future:

1930s, Books, Nuclear, biological, chemical

The Nine Years’ War

Just as reading Orwell serendipitously led me to a reference to the next war in the air, so too has reading Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World. Here, Mustapha Mond, one of the Controllers of the world state, gives an impromptu history lesson (I’ve cut out unrelated, interleaved dialogue from another strand of the plot): ‘The

1930s, Books

What Happened to the Corbetts

Nevil Shute’s 1939 novel What Happened to the Corbetts is, as you might expect, one of the most well-written of the knock-out blow novels; it’s certainly one of the few that is still read today (outside of H. G. Wells’ three contributions to the genre).1 Shute takes a different approach to most of his predecessors,

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