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The Mask of Command
The Mask of Command
Nov 16, 2024 7:32 PM

Author:John Keegan

The Mask of Command

The Mask of Command is about generals: who they are, what they do and how they affect the world we live in. Through portraits of four generals - archetypal hero Alexander the Great, anti-hero Wellington, the unheroic Ulysses S. Grant and the false heroic of Hitler - John Keegan propounds the view of heroism in warfare as inextricable linked with the political imperative of the age and place. He demonstrates how the role of the general alters with the ethos of the society that creates him and concludes that there is no place for heroism in a nuclear world.

The Mask of Command is a companion volume to John Keegan's classic study of the individual soldier, The Face of Battle: together they form a masterpiece of military and human history.

Reviews

As well as being a rare military historian who can also write gracefully, John Keegan has a distinguished capacity for peering behind the conventional view of events

—— Alistair Horne , Sunday Times

Alex Kershaw has delivered a masterpiece about Raul Wallenberg, as witnessed from every perspective.

—— New York Journal of Books

Alex Kershaw describes in this intensely moving, graphic and skilfully researched study, the extraordinary story of how Wallenberg succeeded on saving 100,000 Jews from certain death.

—— Tribune

Figes is a first class historian... [he] proves an excellent guide to the vagaries of the battlefield, the suffering of the ordinary soldiers and the way in which the war became a crucial part of late-Victorian patriotic mythology, contributing to a new ethos of muscular Christianity

—— Dominic Sandbrook , Daily Telegraph

Orlando Figes ... is back doing what he does best - telling us things about Russia and the world that we did not know, and proving that they are important to our understanding of the world today ... With his deep understanding of Russia and its uncomfortable opposition in the world, Figes elegantly underlines how the cold war of the Soviet era froze over fundamental fault lines that had opened up in the 19th century

—— Angus MacQueen , The Observer

It is a fine stirring account, expertly balancing analysis with a patchwork of quotation from a wide variety of spectators and participants, together with an impressive narrative across the vast panoramic sweep of the war ... However, the book's true originality lies in its unravelling of the Crimean War's religious origins

—— Mark Bostridge , Financial Times

Keenly judged, vivid history of a bloody and pointless conflict

—— Sunday Times Culture

An exhaustively researched, beautifully written book

—— Saul David , BBC History

One of our most engaging narrative historians, Orlando Figes has produced with his latest book a rollickingly good account of a war that shocked mid-Victorian England ... intelligent and reliable history ... Figes is a stylish and compelling narrator

—— Lesley Chamberlain , Literary Review

An impressive piece of scholarship ... a concise portrait of the political situation of the time

—— Telegraph Books of the Year 2010

A stellar historian. As ever, it mixes strong narrative pace, a grand canvas and compelling ideas about current geopolitical tensions

—— Tristram Hunt , Observer Best Books of the Year: 2010

A sparkling and in passages brilliant account ... it stands amply and slendidly on its own two feet

—— David Hearst , Guardian

A first-class historian, as his splendid new book, an epic account of the Crimean War of 1853-56, amply demonstrates

—— Daily Telegraph

A model of wide-lens military history

—— Dan Jones , The Times (Christmas books 2010)

Wonderful ... an amazing panoramic view ... I've rarely read anything like it

—— Claire Tomalin

A masterful account of lost and stolen lives

—— Sunday Times

Awesome ... one of the most unforgettable books I have ever read. I defy anyone to read it without weeping at its human suffering, cruelty and courage ... in this book these righteous heroes have their rightful memorial

—— Simon Sebag Montefiore , Mail on Sunday

Innovative and most important

—— Contemporary Review

Compelling and engaging ... an excellent read

—— Soldier

Edgerton's well-researched volume bursts with data that reveal Britain's true strength even when supposed to be in critical condition

—— Peter Moreira , Military History

Britain's War Machine offers the boldest revisionist argument that seeks to overturn some of our most treasured assumptions about Britain's role in the war ... Edgerton [is] an economic historian with an army of marshalled facts and figures at his fingertips ... This is truly an eye-opening book that explodes the masochistic myth of poor little Britain, revealing the island as a proud power with the resources needed to fight and win a world war

—— Nigel Jones , Spectator

Masterful Britain's War Machine promotes the notion that the United Kingdom of the Forties was a superpower, with access to millions of men across the globe, and forming the heart of a global production network

—— Mail on Sunday
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