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Each entry is succinct but comprehensive, and the authors are refreshingly not reluctant to evaluate the historical reputations of the great.
Very readable, and with helpful glossary and maps, this work will find a place on the shelf of the most experienced reader of military history, as well as the more casual reader.
(The numerical rating above is a default setting within Amazon's format. This reviewer does not employ numerical ratings.)
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Frederick the Great gets the longest entry of the whole book. Well-earned. There can be no doubt as to Frederick's greatness as military leader - he was truly great in all aspects of warmaking: strategy, tactics, field command, logistics, personnel, diplomacy. And he had to govern a kingdom at the same time - while finding time for books, conversation, prolific writing, and composing music simultaneously! Yet Frederick owed his reputation and even his personal survival to a great stroke of luck (the death of Tsarina Elizabeth). Perhaps even he himself would have preferred a victory under different circumstances.
Marlborough is billed as the greatest soldier in British history. Wellington is a close second, while Churchill (not mentioned in the book), who was Marlborough's descendant and who idolized Marlborough, was at least as important, in my opionion -though Churchill was as repulsive a man as Marlborough was charming. It's astonishing how Marlborough owed his career to women from start to finish. He got his first important job through his sister's connections to the court, made his early fortune as gigolo of Charles II's mistress, and received his commission at the highest rank from Queen Anne - by virtue of his wife's friendship with her. Probably no upstart from such an obscure background could have risen to such heights except by his good looks and luck with women (admittedly on top of real abilities). (But the same cannot be said of another great warrior of the early modern age: Toyotomi Hideyoshi, who came from an even lower class.) In any case, I agree with Keegan's judgement on Marlborough, as well as with the fact that his entry is much longer than Wellington's.
Interestingly, Keegan's comment on Napoleon was slighting -"Napoleon was not unimportant in military history" was what he is saying in effect. Well, none other than Wellington himself had this to say about Bonaparte as to who was the greatest soldier in his age: "In this age, in past ages, in any age, Napoleon." The fact that Napoleon made great strategic errors definitely tarnished his reputation, no doubt, and Wellington was probably puffing up himself at the same time with this remark. But Keegan's views on Napoleon seem inadequate at best.
Keegan trashes Lawrence of Arabia, but Liddell Hart and Michael Howard both rate him highly.
I'm familiar enough with Keegan's books to know that his opinions can be very odd in places. Sometimes I wonder if I can count on him to think clearly. But this book is still a useful reference tool which I use often.
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