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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Richard H. OsbornePublisher: Pen & Sword Books Ltd Imprint: Frontline Books Weight: 0.658kg ISBN: 9781848324534ISBN 10: 1848324537 Pages: 256 Publication Date: 01 August 2016 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsThe second of these brief reviews of works published this year on the Battle of Jutland, as we approach the end of its centenary year, also makes for fascinating reading. The source material is, as the publisher prints on the book's cover: History's Greatest Sea Battle Told Through Newspaper Reports, Official Documents and the Accounts of Those Who Were There. The author, naval historian Richard Osborne, has assembled the words of many of those involved in order to investigate the many disputes, disagreements, and controversies that arose in 1916 and have never satisfactorily been resolved to this day. Still, no firm conclusion has been drawn and no final answers reached, but the reader will be left much the wiser for having read this excellent work. The book is illustrated with a number of contemporary photos. The front cover illustration depicts Vice- Admiral Beattie's flagship HMS Lion leading the battlecruisers during the Battle of Jutland.-- Ships in Scale, November/December 2016 I know, yet another book about the Battle of Jutland! I've lost track of how many books on Jutland have been issued or reissued to mark the centenary of the battle. Some have been better than others and this is one of the better volumes. In this book the author, Richard Osborne, draws on the wordsof the key players to examine the many disputes, controversies and myths that have surrounded this battle throughout the intervening 100 years. It contains a fairly straightforward account of the battle itself, but what makes this book different is that, wherever possible, the story of the battle is told through newspaper accounts, official documents and eyewitness accounts...The hardback book is 309 pages long and contains several pages of photographs of ships that took part in the battle. There are detailed Appendices which provide details of the ships which formed both fleets, a comprehensive list of notes and references, an extensive Bibliography and a detailed index. At GBP25 I feel this volume is good value for money and I thoroughly recommend this book. -- Warship World The second of these brief reviews of works published this year on the Battle of Jutland, as we approach the end of its centenary year, also makes for fascinating reading. The source material is, as the publisher prints on the book's cover: History's Greatest Sea Battle Told Through Newspaper Reports, Official Documents and the Accounts of Those Who Were There. The author, naval historian Richard Osborne, has assembled the words of many of those involved in order to investigate the many disputes, disagreements, and controversies that arose in 1916 and have never satisfactorily been resolved to this day. Still, no firm conclusion has been drawn and no final answers reached, but the reader will be left much the wiser for having read this excellent work. The book is illustrated with a number of contemporary photos. The front cover illustration depicts Vice- Admiral Beattie's flagship HMS Lion leading the battlecruisers during the Battle of Jutland.--Ships in Scale, November/December 2016 I know, yet another book about the Battle of Jutland! I've lost track of how many books on Jutland have been issued or reissued to mark the centenary of the battle. Some have been better than others and this is one of the better volumes. In this book the author, Richard Osborne, draws on the wordsof the key players to examine the many disputes, controversies and myths that have surrounded this battle throughout the intervening 100 years. It contains a fairly straightforward account of the battle itself, but what makes this book different is that, wherever possible, the story of the battle is told through newspaper accounts, official documents and eyewitness accounts...The hardback book is 309 pages long and contains several pages of photographs of ships that took part in the battle. There are detailed Appendices which provide details of the ships which formed both fleets, a comprehensive list of notes and references, an extensive Bibliography and a detailed index. At 25 I feel this volume is good value for money and I thoroughly recommend this book. --Warship World "The second of these brief reviews of works published this year on the Battle of Jutland, as we approach the end of its centenary year, also makes for fascinating reading. The source material is, as the publisher prints on the book's cover: ""History's Greatest Sea Battle Told Through Newspaper Reports, Official Documents and the Accounts of Those Who Were There."" The author, naval historian Richard Osborne, has assembled the words of many of those involved in order to investigate the many disputes, disagreements, and controversies that arose in 1916 and have never satisfactorily been resolved to this day. Still, no firm conclusion has been drawn and no final answers reached, but the reader will be left much the wiser for having read this excellent work. The book is illustrated with a number of contemporary photos. The front cover illustration depicts Vice- Admiral Beattie's flagship HMS Lion leading the battlecruisers during the Battle of Jutland.-- ""Ships in Scale, November/December 2016"" ""I know, yet another book about the Battle of Jutland! I've lost track of how many books on Jutland have been issued or reissued to mark the centenary of the battle. Some have been better than others and this is one of the better volumes. In this book the author, Richard Osborne, draws on the wordsof the key players to examine the many disputes, controversies and myths that have surrounded this battle throughout the intervening 100 years. It contains a fairly straightforward account of the battle itself, but what makes this book different is that, wherever possible, the story of the battle is told through newspaper accounts, official documents and eyewitness accounts...The hardback book is 309 pages long and contains several pages of photographs of ships that took part in the battle. There are detailed Appendices which provide details of the ships which formed both fleets, a comprehensive list of notes and references, an extensive Bibliography and a detailed index. At £25 I feel this volume is good value for money and I thoroughly recommend this book.""-- ""Warship World""" Author InformationRichard Osborne is a retired lecturer in Pharmacology who was born in Portsmouth in 1948 and awarded a Ph.D in Neurochemistry by Imperial College in 1974. He has always had a keen interest in ships joining the World Ship Society in 1962 and serving as its Chairman from 2000 to 2012. 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