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Battle At Sea
Battle At Sea
Oct 6, 2024 10:18 PM

Author:John Keegan

Battle At Sea

In Battle at Sea, Sir John Keegan applies to maritime warfare the technique that he put to such brilliant effect in his classic of war on land, The Face of Battle. He concentrates on four key conflicts: Trafalgar, Jutland, Midway and the Battle of the Atlantic. He takes us into the very heart of the fighting while providing a remarkable panoramic view of naval warfare through the centuries.

Reviews

Rich in unexpected facts and insights...Keegan's historical command is dazzling

—— Jan Morris , Independent

A masterly study

—— Daily Mail

Among Britain's distinguished group of military historians... John Keegan is outstanding

—— Michael Howard , London Review of Books

This is by far the best book I've come across on the subject of the extermination of Hungary's Jews

—— Tibor Fischer , Guardian

Very, very rarely you read something that knocks the breath out of you... This masterpiece does

—— Carole Angier , Literary Review

A starting point and an intellectual inspiration ... a classic of masterly historical writing.

—— James Walvin

James is not afraid to touch his pen with the flame of ardent personal feeling - a sense of justice, love of freedom, admiration for heroism, hatred for tyranny - and his detailed, richly documented and dramatically written book holds a deep and lasting interest.

—— New York Times

Revolutionarily, the book abandoned the old narrative of black victimhood in favour of accenting the agency of the formerly enslaved who, fuelled by a desire for liberty, fought to achieve autonomy.

—— Colin Grant , Prospect

The standard and the main text through which the Haitian revolution is studied ... a book I've read back to back many times ... An incredibly brilliant book, an undeniably magnificent contribution to scholarship.

—— Akala's Great Reads

Reading and rereading The Black Jacobins, I am struck by its incredible wit and humanity, and James' determination to write a history of slavery in the Caribbean in which people of African descent appear as thinking, feeling human agents - in other words, as the protagonists of their own history and not background characters in an essentially European story.

—— Dr Liam J. Liburd, Assistant Professor of Black British History, Durham University
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