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Book reviews for "Williams,_Martin" sorted by average review score:

Awake Again
Published in Hardcover by Cycle America (1994)
Authors: Martin Krieg and William W. Orrison
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I L O V E THIS BOOK!!!!!
Following seven weeks in a coma,AWAKE AGAIN is the story of one man's incredible journey from "total unconcsiousness" through fully conscious recovery to a position of elevated mental, physical, spiritual and emotional consciousness from which Martin Kreig currently lives and operates. The book is a celebration of the power of the human spirit to not only survive or overcome, but to excell. I totally love this book! I was immediately drawn in and could not put it down. Powerfully written, AWAKE AGAIN is honest, real, gutsy,poignant,tender,courageous,candid and inspired. It made me laugh. It made me cry. It changed the way I look at life forever. A must read for head injury survivors, those who love us and anyone who is mentally, physically, and/or emotionally challenged who truely believes in life without limitations, either self or other-imposed. AWAKE AGAIN will awaken you from the complacency of a " normal " existence and empower you to elevate your own consciousness on your personal journey to realizing your dreams. A powerful book. Thanks for you, Martin!!!

Inspiring: Filled with Love and Wonder !
The extreme challenges and discouragement that Mr. Krieg overcame to assert his Spirit's vision and determination are lovingly and compassionately portrayed in his marvelous book. All of us at some time in our lives feel dejected and at odds with the problem cards that we are dealt. I am the survivor of an accident with a automobile and my bicycle in which I was badly injured, so I could relate directly to how difficult it must have been for him. Fortunately I was wearing a helmet! I realized how much worse it could have been had I sutained a head injury.

He alludes to how important good attitude and courage are to everyone in life, and how important it is to give your best attitude and determination to everything you do. I particulary enjoyed the list of helpful and meaningful affirmations listed in the back of the book. This book is a must-read for anyone, especially those who think that life is rough for them. It is thoroughly encouraging and full of Love and Joy for Life - as is Martin. I have had the pleasure of meeting him on occasion. I most heartily recommend this book.

I cried through the whole first chapter
just finished one of the most incredible journeys I've ever been on. I want to thank Martin for his Love,stregnth,and willingness to show all of us other T.B.I. recipients that we can do it! I cried through the whole first chapter and after that I cried a few more chapters down the road because I knew what he was feeling.

I think the last chapter though really touched on something in my aching soul. I liked his candidness and I loved the fact that he shared so much of himself with me. I almost felt as if he wrote the book for me! The reason for my emotions I can't find words to describe,and I'm pretty good at being descriptive!

This is a book that should be read, digested, and re- read! It will take one through love, anger, and emotions beyond! And I should know cause I sustained a head injury two and a half years ago and I went to every single library in Gainesville and all the surrounding counties looking for a book written by someone who also shared my same challenge but there was nothing. And then there was Martins book and it does that very thing.It shows me how limitless I truly am! Tracy Barber Writer, Massage Therapist (For questions about the above, Tracy can be reached at: lalu@techcomm.net in Florida)


A Visit to William Blake's Inn
Published in Library Binding by Bt Bound (1999)
Authors: Nancy Willard, Martin Provensen, and Alice Provensen
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great book for children
William Blake (whose poetry this book mirrors) runs an inn where we meet angels, rabbits, tigers, a host of interesting characters. It's a great introduction to poetry for the youngest of children. The illustrations are quaint and fit this book perfectly. I can see why it has won the awards it has.

Marvelous Poetry and Illustrations
This children's book is dedicated to eighteenth century British poet and artist William Blake. A well-deserved winner of the 1982 Newberry Medal and a Caldecott Honor Book, this work consists of a series of catchy poems with very satisfying and detailed illustrations to complement them.
Each poem has a rhyme scheme of sorts that make them sound clever, especially when read aloud. While each poem addresses a different topic, all the poems relate to each other collectively because they center on the comfortable and cozy William Blake's Inn. Every character and animal appears more than once throughout the book, and they stay at the inn.
One poem that stood out of my mind is entitled "The King of Cats Sends a Postcard to His Wife." The illustration of the poem shows the cat sitting at the breakfast table with William Blake. One part of postcard written by the "King of Cats" said: "Have you set the kittens free?/ Do they sometimes ask for me?/Is our catnip growing tall?/Did you patch the garden wall?" I thought this portion was interesting because it seems as though a cat away from home would be concerned about these sorts of things (if indeed cats possessed human qualities).
I would say that the illustrations are what maintained my interest throughout the book. Each illustration has yellow and tan hues, and some of the backgrounds evoke cartoon-like visions of London in William Blake's time. The illustrations are all very detailed, making it necessary to flip through the book more than once to fully appreciate them.
Although this book is designed for children, I would recommend this book to people of all ages. Although children would not understand the poems due to a somewhat difficult vocabulary, they will enjoy the wonderfully detailed illustrations and smooth rhyme of the poetry. Most adults would appreciate the book as well because of the excellent illustrations and magical poetry that A Visit to William Blake's Inn has to offer.

Brilliant...simply brilliant
When I was a child, I read A Visit to William Blake's Inn and it inspired the poet within myself. Now as an adult, I still find the imaginative poetry within this book to permeate my thoughts. The colorful imagery painted within its text matches perfectly to the book's charming illustrations. William Blake's Inn is a must for the collector of prized children's literature.


The Nursing Mother's Problem Solver
Published in Digital by Fireside Books ()
Authors: Claire Martin and William Sears
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Fantastic even for a 3rd-time nurser ...
As a third-time nursing mom I found this book to be invaluable. Its format was logical and easy to use. The research was more extensive than any other book I have read on nursing. It answered pressing questions immediately and fully. Finally I enjoyed its humor and the light approach to common challenges! Jean Kirshner

Lifesaver for a new mom
This book was a tremendous help to me when I came down with a bout of mastitus in my first month of motherhood. Not only did it help me diagnose my problem well enough to prompt me to call my doctor, but it offered advice for how to avoid mastitus in the future. Considering how many hours we devote to learning the ins and outs of pregancy, and the number of visits we make to the doc to prepare for birth, it is amazing how little information there is about the complications of and approaches to breastfeeding! The Nursing Mother's Problem-Solver is a must-read for every new mom--I only wish I had thought to read it before I had the baby when I had more time!

Excellent reference!
The easy format of this book makes it a true "users manual" for the breastfeeding mother. The index is excellent and it is very easy to find answers to your questions in this text. I found it very well written. I enjoy leafing through and reading about various topics, as well as using it to problem-solve specific issues I have encountered while breastfeeding my child. If you plan to breastfeed I would advise getting this book ahead of time as you are likely to experience some difficulty along the way. Breastfeeding is a wonderful experience, and so worth the time and effort it takes to get it down, but it is not "easy" initially. Don't let little problems deter you, get the help and support you need through a book like this one, as well as a good lactation consultant when necessary. I've turned to this book several times after a difficult feeding and found the suggestions I've needed.


The Parent's Tao Te Ching: Ancient Advice for Modern Parents: A New Interpretation
Published in Paperback by Marlowe & Company (1999)
Authors: William C. Martin and Hank Tusinski
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Simply Hopeful.
This book is simple. It is hopeful. It brings back the wonder... to weary parents.

It applys to babies as well as teens.

Share it with those who need it.

Great text for parenting classes that doesn't read like an owners manual.

This book not only brought parenting alive to me but after many readings, any many translations...

it brings the tao alive as well.

Be prepared it is written in poetic form. And requires your input...

Prayers of Remembrance for the Soul
The Parent's Tao Te Ching is not about behavior modification and table etiquette. There are plenty of other books for that sort of thing. How many times have you read on of those "How to Raise a Perfect Child" books and tried to apply their practical advice to your unpractical offspring? (note: I have just counted and I have 37 books about practical parenting on the shelves of my living room library that I have collected over the past 19 years of being a mother). I can't count how many times my children have looked at me with smirks on their little faces and said, "What book did you read that in?" when I've tried yet another spin on an old parenting technique.

I am so grateful for Mr. Martin's book. It does not tell me I can be Martha Stewart, Mother Goose and the Pink Power Ranger all rolled into one as long as I follow the steps. It simply reminds me of what is real. For example, here is an excerpt from one of my favorite passages:

"They look so small and frail but they are great and magnificent. They are born of the same womb that birthed the cosmos and knitted together the galaxies."

This book is a simple, elegant reminder of what truly matters. I have two copies. One for my bedside and one for the office. I open the second one when my husband calls with the latest child- related disaster update.

I highly recommend Willam Martin's other Tao Te Ching related books: The Couple's Tao Te Ching and The Sage's Tao Te Ching.

I really love this book
I really love this book. It is simple, like a cup of coffee in the morning and doesn't require that I apply each chapter to the raising of my children like a course in Parenting 101. I feel the author William Martin understood I was searching for an inner understanding, not more rules for parenting that can be so hard to obey because they only work once. It seems to be a real challenge to raise our children, keeping them safe, all the while being aware of the subtle difference between teaching and controlling. I have often found myself questioning my decision to become a parent, a job I cannot walk away from. After reading this book, I have started to understand where the real parent in me resides and she's a lot stronger, and frankly, a lot more fun than I had given her credit for.


Annapolis
Published in Hardcover by Warner Books (1996)
Author: William Martin
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WHAT'S GOOD FOR THE U. S. NAVY...
Are you seeking a book with a panoramic sweep of American History? Do you wish to view it through the prism of perhaps the most tradition-bound institution in the United States? Do you want to witness the great battles that changed history and altered the map of the world? Do you want to see proud families clash? Behold Admirals' egos? Eavesdrop on the great personalities who have strutted history's stage? Then William Martin's sprawling ANNAPOLIS is for you! It's an almost 800 page epic you'll be sorry to finish. A work, I think you'll agree, begging to be a mini-series.
William Martin is a wonderful storyteller and Historian who brings life and breath - and breadth - to the people and events that propel his story - our story! Most of the historical moments you'll recognize. Others will be new and some will be revelations; but all of them are more interesting in his telling. From the battles waged by the U. S. S. Constitution to the sparring of the Monitor and the Merrimack....From Midway to the rivers of Vietnam, Martin's U. S. Navy - and his Stafford family - help shape and protect America. In light of recent dark days in our history, this story is more relevant than ever. It's a 5-Star effort from a 5-Star talent. It's unquestionably the best book of this type I have ever read.
Pick up this book! Keep your 'eyes in the boat,' and before long you'll understand why what's good for the U. S. Navy is good for the United States of America!

Haunting History
Annapolis was my first William Martin book. I have since read everything except the out of print "The Rising of the Moon". Growing up just miles from Annapolis, the title drew me in while I was looking for a casual read. Boy was I wrong. From the beginning I was enraptured with the history of the US Navy and the people who made it the greatest force afloat. His familiar style of telling a history now and then until the complete historical fabric is woven is an entertaining vehihcle that maintains the relevance of the material. For Martin, history is more than a collection of dates. It lives and he breathes life into it for his readers.

The sequence in the South Pacific haunts me even now two years after reading the novel. Martin ably carries on the traditon of historical story telling from Michener. He has demonstrated the ability to paint on the large canvas (Annapolis), the small canvas (Cape Cod) and the personal canvas (Citizen Washington).

I look forward to learning more about my country and its heroes great and small from Martin in the future.

I loved this book and recommend it as a must read. Books like this should be mandated in schools however the stark nature of reality would keep this book out of curricula. Instead, students will continue to learn fabled accounts of how America came to be. It would be so much better if children were taught that some fairly ordinary people with faults like us came together and became something extrordinary. This is what Martin does best.

WHAT'S GOOD FOR THE U. S. NAVY....
Are you seeking a book with a panoramic sweep of American History? Do you wish to view it through the prism of perhaps the most tradition-bound institution in the United States? Do you want to witness the great battles that changed history and altered the map of the world? Do you want to see proud families clash? Behold Admirals' egos? Eavesdrop on the great personalities who have strutted history's stage? Then William Martin's sprawling ANNAPOLIS is for you! It's an almost 800 the page epic you'll be sorry to finish. A work, I think you'll agree, begging to be a mini-series.
William Martin is a wonderful storyteller and Historian who brings life and breath - and breadth - to the people and events that propel his story....our story! Most of the historical moments you'll recognize. Others will be new, and some will be revelations; but all of them are more interesting in his telling! From the battles waged by the U. S. S. Constitution to the sparring of the Monitor and Merrimack. From Midway to the rivers of Vietnam, Martin's U. S Navy - and his Stafford family - help shape and protect America. In light of recent dark days in our history, this story is more relevant than ever. It's a 5 star effort from a 5 star talent.
Pick up this book! Keep your 'eyes in the boat,' and before long you'll understand why what's good for the U. S. Navy is good for the United States of America!


Cape Cod
Published in Hardcover by Warner Books (1991)
Authors: William Martin and Jamie Raab
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Arise Readers...
Cape Cod, Engrossing..Entertaining..The perfect book to take to the beach-so says the Boston Sunday Hearld. A mixture of truth..and misleading fallacy.. Entertaining? Slightly..Engrossing? hardly. I had to force feed parts of it to my brain..other parts I simply skimmed, How much DESCRIPTION is a person expected to sustain? Annapolis was the first book I read by William Martin, I instantly feel in love, and mistakenly thought the seeming lack of depth to the "story" near the end of the book was a conscious effort to bring the reader down easily. In the reading of Cape Cod..I find the same shallow feel to the 20th century aspects of the book.
Cape Cod is a yoyo, sucking you down into the past, wrapping you in the arms of another time,engulfing you in the beauty of a well told tale, then jerking you up, ripping away the comfort of oblivion and rudely inserting you into the black embrace of..here and "now".
I enjoy Martins' tales of the past, I do not enjoy his depiction, or characters of the 20th century, he lacks..something in that area, and leaves me wondering if the same man mints both sides of the coin. One interesting thing about this book, which amused me greatly and had me applauding, is that there is not one single character amoung the many, that is even partially likable, which satisfys my misanthropic view of the world. Martin should stick to weaving words which draw A picture of the world behind us..and leave others to dwell in the present..
I think I'll try Nerve Endings next.. Who wants to send it to me? As it seems to be out of print.. *sigh*

CAPE COD.....It ain't just beaches.....
At least not in William Martin's novel of the same name. In Martin's CAPE COD there are feuding families, long-held secrets, regional history and, tying it all together, a mystery - as well as those wondrous beaches and that natural essence of 'The Cape' (as we New Englanders know and love it) that he brings to life in this story.
From the first pages of this novel, in which whales inexplicably beach themselves, Native Americans and White men clash, and the Pilgrims, noble, flawed and human as they were, suffer the awful indignities of the relentless voyage to the New World, we're off on a William Martin-style adventure. As is his BACK BAY and ANNAPOLIS, the story unfolds through the eyes of (sometimes warring - always interesting) families, and jumps back and forth in time. This enables us to feel the historical events that are going to impact on the modern-day intrigue. I have always liked this about William Martin's stories. This sense of what it was like 'then,' how people felt, how they acted. We get to enjoy a well written tale and learn a thing or three along the way. Martin's respect for, and love of, history is evident throughout CAPE COD, as it is in ANNAPOLIS, BACK BAY and CITIZEN WASHINGTON. And his reverence for 'The Cape' will be evident to every reader, especially we Cape lovers! For us, that's a bonus. To read CAPE COD is to feel, in those pages, that essence of 'TheCape,'that infuses us as soon as we have crossed the Sagamore and the Bourne bridges....CAPE COD is a wonderful story, a lesson in our history, and the kind of enlightening adventure we have come to expect from William Martin. As usual, he delivers! Read this book...Perhaps sitting in a lounge chair on a sunny summer day at the edge of Old Silver Beach...You'll be glad you did....

America's beginnings
Martin brings the plight of the Pilgrims to life. He also manages also to so us once again that these were people and not icons. While fiction, it is easy to visualize the petty argumnets and personality struggles within this group that most of us assume was a cohesive unit with a united purpose. Using his now familiar device of switching back and forth from now and then, Martin paints a living picture of the early history of the Cape. This was the last of Martin's books that I read prior to Citizen Washington. I hesitated because I thought the topic limited but I ended learning and enjoying a compelling history of a special niche in American history.

Martin demonstrates an uncanny ability to tell the great stories (Annapolis - US Navy) a the small (Cape Cod) and make them breathe.


Back Bay
Published in Paperback by Warner Books (1992)
Author: William Martin
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Strong plot, weak characters
I bought this book based on several 5-star evaluations here in Amazon, but I'm sorry to say that I was disappointed (which doesn't happen very often). I admit that the plot was interesting and I learned more about Boston than I knew before. However, many of the characters (especially the present-day ones) seemed very two-dimensional. It was hard to tell who was supposed to be driving the action -- it wasn't entirely third-person (which would have been logical in an historical novel) and it wasn't written through the eyes of only one or two characters. For example, a lot of space is given to Fallon the contemporary writer, and he seems to be the one that should draw our focus, but his intentions are all over the map. In fact, every time a new person is introduced, we get glimpses of that person's point-of-view too. I found it disconcerting to read the thoughts of a character in one paragraph, then have to guess what might have motivated their actions in the next one.
Maybe it's an older style of writing (the book was originally written in 1979), but I found the descriptions of relationships between people especially clumsy. I don't know if I'd have finished "Back Bay" if I hadn't been on a trip to a foreign country with no opportunity to find something else in English. I certainly appreciate Michener more than I did as a result of reading this attempt at his kind of storytelling.

gripping...couldn't put it down!
I am not always much of a reader, but this book caught me from the first pages. It is a MUST for anyone who knows and/or loves the city of Boston and the history that goes along with it. I found myself visualizing the streets and areas of Boston as I read each chapter. My only disappointment was the ending...I could not believe that I was on the last page! I wanted it to end differently for the characters (thus, only 4 stars), but overall I was quite satisfied with the book. I am now going to dig into Cape Cod, but the same author.

a teapot in a tempest
a family saga told in parallel histories of the early 19th and the mid to late 20th centuries, spanning six generations. historic boston makes for a prominent backdrop for an elaborately plotted metropolitan treasure hunt doomed by a fatal curse. contrivances aside, an entertaining, nearly folkloric tale.


The Jazz Tradition
Published in Paperback by Oxford University Press (1993)
Author: Martin Williams
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music always...
A reader's unfamiliarity with jazz does not detract from the value of this book. As a neophyte jazz listener I was introduced to Morton, Coltrane, Monk and Coleman from reading Williams' descriptions of their work and wondering "what does that SOUND like," then buying the records to hear (and decide) for myself. This is one of the most focused introductions to pre-1965 jazz you will find, because it is about the music, not sociology, biographical trivia, or amusing anecdotes.
Williams' preoccupation is with form, both in composition and improvisation. He shows how great jazz musicians demonstrate a strong sense of structure, (whether consciously or unconsciously), in their work, and how later musicians have built on the work of earlier players. In other words, these guys aren't just up there blowing a bunch of notes, they are creating art based on form and tradition in a similar and equal way to "classical" music.

The Jazz Tradition
Published in book form in 1970, Williams's study now seems critically unfashionable by arguing that jazz develops through the work of its composers (eg. Morton, Ellington, Monk) and its improvisers (Armstrong, Young. Parker, Coltrane, Coleman); it also concentrates on formal changes in the music rather than offering cultural, sociological or biographical analysis. But this is still the most intelligent, instructive, readable and stimulating book on jazz from New Orleans to free jazz to date. If you want to read superb, no-nonsense descriptions of individual jazz sides and get a meaningful sense of how musicians, individual tracks and the main movements of jazz inter-relate, this is the book for you.

An excellent book for those seeking to explore Jazz
I have found Williams to be a very perceptive guide to a wide range of composers and musicians. His judgments usually seem to be right on the money and his writing is quite clear and not at all aimed at some elite of jazz initiates (not that there's anything wrong with assuming your audience knows something - there's no imperative for authors to pitch every book at tyros, as much as certain readers seem to think that it's an outrage when they don't understand something they've read).


Computer: A History of the Information Machine (The Sloan Technology Series)
Published in Hardcover by Basic Books (1996)
Authors: Martin Campbell-Kelly and William Aspray
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Rich but dry
As a kid, I read this book over and over, soaking up the volumes of information. The reading is pretty dry, but the story covered is fascinating. Perhaps one thing that made it interesting was reading about the person who bought it for me - my grandfather. He was pleased with how he had been interviewed and, of course, thought they could have said more about his area of study!

An Excellent Read
There are countless books covering the PC revolution from about the 1970's and onwards, but not very many that carefully cover the saga of the 1800's and onward! This book does an excellent job at capturing what happened in the realm of computing from Babbage's work all the way up to what began the downfall of the mainframe to the minis.

The Companies and Economics behind the PC
I recently finished this book and "Engines of the Mind : The Evolution of the Computer from Mainframes to Microprocessors" by Joel N. Shurkin. Both are attempts at writing a detailed history of the development of the computer and the events surrounding it, and I must admit that I found "Computer" much more entertaining than Shurkin's text.

The difference between the two books is very slight, however, it is significant. "Computer" walks us through the work of Charles Babbage and carries us through the backrooms of large businesses at the turn of the 19th century. The authors discuss the work and lives of the people that were the first 'computers' working all day long to finish calculations that were used in business, and then for the calculation of artillery tables in the world wars. It was the replacement of these workers and their omissive errors and necessarily slow speed and development time that drove the development of the huge mainframes that would be developed by the military. The authors do a great job of walking through the history of the early computer companies, especially Hollerith's Tabulating Machine Co., now IBM, and National Cash Register. The role that these two companies played in increasing the public's reliance and trust in machines was a key enabler of the computer revolution. The authors then take us through to modern times and we follow the ultra-competitive computer industry through wave after wave of consolidation and rapid technological innovation. This book also shows us a slight glimpse of the business forces behind the development of the transistor, and how this invention would wind up changing the world.

I could not have enjoyed this book more. Of the two, it definitely did the best job of focusing on the industry and economic changes that have led us to the modern computer age. The annecdotes and writing style of the authors is well-suited to the material and I very highly recommend this book. I also recommend the other book as well - I believe that if read together (with some time to digest in between them) they do a great job of painting the picture of a fascinating development of one of the most important technological changes in the history of man.


Patton: The Man Behind the Legend 1885-1945
Published in Audio Cassette by Blackstone Audiobooks (1990)
Authors: Martin Blumenson and William E. Lavelle
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quck, interesting read
Although there is no doubt in my mind that Patton is one of the most brilliant generals of 20th century USA, Blumenson seems to be a bit biased towards this controversial figure. He rationalizes all of the various controversies that surrounded Patton to put Patton in the best light. There is no controversy, or 'dirt' dug up on Patton here. Otherwise a fairly quick and very interesting examination of the life of Patton.

Five Stars for a Four-Star General!
For readers who want a top-notch biography of Patton without committing to an 800-page or 1000-page tome, this is the book. Blumenson makes excellent use of Patton's personal letters, especially those to Patton's wife, to reveal the human side of his tough-as-nails persona. Patton with nervous indigestion? Patton feeling worthless and inferior? Who would have guessed! Highly recommended for those interested in historic figures and military history, but who don't want to get bogged down in minutae such as detailed battlefield tactics. This book focuses on the man, as it should, and not so much on the wars that made his career. That being said, my only complaint is that for the chapters about actual warfare the book could have used some basic large-scale maps of North Africa and Western Europe, especially France, showing the route of Patton's advances and major battles. I sometimes felt lost as Patton rolled through one village after another to attack the enemy.

This book is GREAT for a newcomer to Patton
I saw the movie with George C Scott, and was inspired to learn more about Patton, and this was the first book I picked up. It turns out that this was the right one, as it is fast reading, relatively short, and gives a good overview of the man behind the legend. I feel that the author is objective, and is not biased, which must be hard. He talks about Patton's weaknesses as well as his strengths. He even discussess Patton's later years when he became delusional and described the Jewish people as "lower than animals". I particularly liked the end, where it states that if Patton had lived, he would not be the legend that he is today. I have since read "The last days of Patton", an entire novel, which is only covered here in one short chapter. Of course, this is not a bad thing if you have not read a Patton book before. I HIGHLY recommend this one as a first Patton book to read or give as a gift to a friend.


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