|
|
|||
|
||||
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Brian McAllister LinnPublisher: University Press of Kansas Imprint: University Press of Kansas Dimensions: Width: 16.20cm , Height: 2.90cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 0.658kg ISBN: 9780700634750ISBN 10: 0700634754 Pages: 336 Publication Date: 30 June 2023 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In stock We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviews"""Brian Linn is one of the most significant scholars of US military history writing today--distinguished not only by his innovative analysis but also by his thorough and nuanced understanding of how the US Army functions. He's given us another ambitious and original work, an unromanticized account of war's aftermath that will prove essential reading for both junior officers and senior leaders, as well as for anyone interested in military history.""--Beth Bailey, author of An Army Afire: How the US Army Confronted it's Racial Crisis in the Vietnam Era and director of the Center for Military, War, and Society Studies, University of Kansas ""How do we properly prepare for the next war. . .when we are sure to gut the force at the end of the last one? Read this book and study history. Brian Linn's work is critically important for both historians and senior leaders of our US Armed Forces today. It is both a warning and a reassurance; the difficulties we face today in budgeting, modernization, recruiting, and readiness show signs of a pattern discernible in most major periods of drawdown. There is an opportunity to avoid mistakes and to not overreact to what should have been expected. Leaders in and out of uniform: read this book now!""--Gen. (Ret.) Charles H. Jacoby, Jr., US Army ""Brilliant, insightful, on-target. As a veteran of the post-Vietnam, post-Cold War, post-Desert Storm, and post 9/11 armies, I can certify that Brian Linn is the foremost authority on the US Army . . . and in the words of General Creighton Abrams after the Korean War, 'our job is to hang in there, day in and day out, so that when that soldier has to fight, he can be as well-equipped and as well-prepared as we can make him. And that's why we hang on.' Linn's masterful book brings this truth to life.""--Gregg F. Martin, Major General (Ret.), US Army and former president, National Defense University ""By comparing different post-war periods--something that no other work has done--Real Soldiering reveals a repeated pattern of initial hope followed by difficult adjustments that has been overlooked until now. Linn's argument has particularly important implications for our understanding of the aftermath of Vietnam and suggests lessons for what to do after Iraq and Afghanistan. Historians, soldiers today, and anyone interested in the US Army will enjoy and learn from this important book.""--J. P. Clark, author of Preparing for War: The Emergence of the Modern U.S. Army, 1815-1917 ""In this strikingly original reassessment of the US Army's struggles to implement meaningful postwar reforms, Brian Linn once again shows his ability to identify recurring themes across long time periods. Decrying the 'era exceptionalism' and 'triumphalist narratives' offered by many who have studied the American army, Linn finds that problems of retention, the inability to construct policy and doctrine consistent with the realities of American politics and culture, and the failure to devote sufficient emphasis on preparing for war or care for personnel have consistently plagued the army. With a sharp eye for the telling anecdote, he demonstrates that despite the best intentions of many individuals, historical lessons have often remained unlearned rather than learned.""--Robert Wooster, Regents Professor of History, Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi (retired), and author of The United States Army and the Making of America: From Confederation to Empire, 1775-1903" Brian Linn is one of the most significant scholars of US military history writing today--distinguished not only by his innovative analysis but also by his thorough and nuanced understanding of how the US Army functions. He's given us another ambitious and original work, an unromanticized account of war's aftermath that will prove essential reading for both junior officers and senior leaders, as well as for anyone interested in military history. --Beth Bailey, author of An Army Afire: How the US Army Confronted it's Racial Crisis in the Vietnam Era and director of the Center for Military, War, and Society Studies, University of Kansas How do we properly prepare for the next war. . .when we are sure to gut the force at the end of the last one? Read this book and study history. Brian Linn's work is critically important for both historians and senior leaders of our US Armed Forces today. It is both a warning and a reassurance; the difficulties we face today in budgeting, modernization, recruiting, and readiness show signs of a pattern discernible in most major periods of drawdown. There is an opportunity to avoid mistakes and to not overreact to what should have been expected. Leaders in and out of uniform: read this book now! --Gen. (Ret.) Charles H. Jacoby, Jr., US Army Brilliant, insightful, on-target. As a veteran of the post-Vietnam, post-Cold War, post-Desert Storm, and post 9/11 armies, I can certify that Brian Linn is the foremost authority on the US Army . . . and in the words of General Creighton Abrams after the Korean War, 'our job is to hang in there, day in and day out, so that when that soldier has to fight, he can be as well-equipped and as well-prepared as we can make him. And that's why we hang on.' Linn's masterful book brings this truth to life. --Gregg F. Martin, Major General (Ret.), US Army and former president, National Defense University By comparing different post-war periods--something that no other work has done--Real Soldiering reveals a repeated pattern of initial hope followed by difficult adjustments that has been overlooked until now. Linn's argument has particularly important implications for our understanding of the aftermath of Vietnam and suggests lessons for what to do after Iraq and Afghanistan. Historians, soldiers today, and anyone interested in the US Army will enjoy and learn from this important book. --J. P. Clark, author of Preparing for War: The Emergence of the Modern U.S. Army, 1815-1917 In this strikingly original reassessment of the US Army's struggles to implement meaningful postwar reforms, Brian Linn once again shows his ability to identify recurring themes across long time periods. Decrying the 'era exceptionalism' and 'triumphalist narratives' offered by many who have studied the American army, Linn finds that problems of retention, the inability to construct policy and doctrine consistent with the realities of American politics and culture, and the failure to devote sufficient emphasis on preparing for war or care for personnel have consistently plagued the army. With a sharp eye for the telling anecdote, he demonstrates that despite the best intentions of many individuals, historical lessons have often remained unlearned rather than learned. --Robert Wooster, Regents Professor of History, Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi (retired), and author of The United States Army and the Making of America: From Confederation to Empire, 1775-1903 """Brian Linn is one of the most significant scholars of US military history writing today--distinguished not only by his innovative analysis but also by his thorough and nuanced understanding of how the US Army functions. He's given us another ambitious and original work, an unromanticized account of war's aftermath that will prove essential reading for both junior officers and senior leaders, as well as for anyone interested in military history.""--Beth Bailey, director of the Center for Military, War, and Society Studies, University of Kansas, author of An Army Afire: How the US Army Confronted its Racial Crisis in the Vietnam Era ""How do we properly prepare for the next war. . .when we are sure to gut the force at the end of the last one? Read this book and study history. Brian Linn's work is critically important for both historians and senior leaders of our US Armed Forces today. It is both a warning and a reassurance; the difficulties we face today in budgeting, modernization, recruiting, and readiness show signs of a pattern discernible in most major periods of drawdown. There is an opportunity to avoid mistakes and to not overreact to what should have been expected. Leaders in and out of uniform: read this book now!""--General (ret.) Charles H. Jacoby, Jr., US Army ""Brilliant, insightful, on-target. As a veteran of the post-Vietnam, post-Cold War, post-Desert Storm, and post 9/11 armies, I can certify that Brian Linn is the foremost authority on the US Army . . . and in the words of General Creighton Abrams after the Korean War, 'our job is to hang in there, day in and day out, so that when that soldier has to fight, he can be as well-equipped and as well-prepared as we can make him. And that's why we hang on.' Linn's masterful book brings this truth to life.""--Gregg F. Martin, Major General (Ret.), US Army and former president, National Defense University ""By comparing different post-war periods--something that no other work has done--Real Soldiering reveals a repeated pattern of initial hope followed by difficult adjustments that has been overlooked until now. Linn's argument has particularly important implications for our understanding of the aftermath of Vietnam and suggests lessons for what to do after Iraq and Afghanistan. Historians, soldiers today, and anyone interested in the US Army will enjoy and learn from this important book.""--J. P. Clark, author of Preparing for War: The Emergence of the Modern U.S. Army, 1815-1917 ""In this strikingly original reassessment of the US Army's struggles to implement meaningful postwar reforms, Brian Linn once again shows his ability to identify recurring themes across long time periods. Decrying the 'era exceptionalism' and 'triumphalist narratives' offered by many who have studied the American army, Linn finds that problems of retention, the inability to construct policy and doctrine consistent with the realities of American politics and culture, and the failure to devote sufficient emphasis on preparing for war or care for personnel have consistently plagued the army. With a sharp eye for the telling anecdote, he demonstrates that despite the best intentions of many individuals, historical lessons have often remained unlearned rather than learned.""--Robert Wooster, Regents Professor of History, Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi (retired), and author of The United States Army and the Making of America: From Confederation to Empire, 1775-1903""This may be the best of Brian Linn's many distinguished books. Real Soldiering combines the archival and quantitative depth of Elvis's Army with the thematic range of The Echo of Battle. Every chapter is chock full of insights. No other work explores the inner histories of the peacetime US Army with such nuance and attention to underlying continuities. Uniquely valuable for students of the US Army, scholars of military institutions, and American historians.""--Samuel J. Watson, professor of history, United States Military Academy, and author of Peacekeepers and Conquerors: The Army Officer Corps on the American Frontier, 1821-1846 ""Brian Linn has written another masterpiece. Real Soldiering tells the story of the US Army not in war but in peacetime and how it has learned, and not learned, from the major wars it had just fought. Real Soldiering should be read widely within the US Army and US National Security Establishment. Its insights should shape how the US Army thinks about war and conflict today and in the future.""--Colonel Gian Gentile (US Army retired) author of Wrong Turn: America's Deadly Embrace of Counterinsurgency" """Demonstrating a mastery of military doctrine, Army history at the institutional as well as unit levels, the conduct of major American wars and the flow of American politics, Real Soldiering makes its case in relatively compact chapters that not only prove the central thesis of the book but reveal interesting facts along the way.""--Army Magazine ""Brian Linn is one of the most significant scholars of US military history writing today--distinguished not only by his innovative analysis but also by his thorough and nuanced understanding of how the US Army functions. He's given us another ambitious and original work, an unromanticized account of war's aftermath that will prove essential reading for both junior officers and senior leaders, as well as for anyone interested in military history.""--Beth Bailey, director of the Center for Military, War, and Society Studies, University of Kansas, author of An Army Afire: How the US Army Confronted its Racial Crisis in the Vietnam Era ""How do we properly prepare for the next war. . .when we are sure to gut the force at the end of the last one? Read this book and study history. Brian Linn's work is critically important for both historians and senior leaders of our US Armed Forces today. It is both a warning and a reassurance; the difficulties we face today in budgeting, modernization, recruiting, and readiness show signs of a pattern discernible in most major periods of drawdown. There is an opportunity to avoid mistakes and to not overreact to what should have been expected. Leaders in and out of uniform: read this book now!""--General (ret.) Charles H. Jacoby, Jr., US Army ""Brilliant, insightful, on-target. As a veteran of the post-Vietnam, post-Cold War, post-Desert Storm, and post 9/11 armies, I can certify that Brian Linn is the foremost authority on the US Army . . . and in the words of General Creighton Abrams after the Korean War, 'our job is to hang in there, day in and day out, so that when that soldier has to fight, he can be as well-equipped and as well-prepared as we can make him. And that's why we hang on.' Linn's masterful book brings this truth to life.""--Gregg F. Martin, Major General (Ret.), US Army and former president, National Defense University ""By comparing different post-war periods--something that no other work has done--Real Soldiering reveals a repeated pattern of initial hope followed by difficult adjustments that has been overlooked until now. Linn's argument has particularly important implications for our understanding of the aftermath of Vietnam and suggests lessons for what to do after Iraq and Afghanistan. Historians, soldiers today, and anyone interested in the US Army will enjoy and learn from this important book.""--J. P. Clark, author of Preparing for War: The Emergence of the Modern U.S. Army, 1815-1917 ""In this strikingly original reassessment of the US Army's struggles to implement meaningful postwar reforms, Brian Linn once again shows his ability to identify recurring themes across long time periods. Decrying the 'era exceptionalism' and 'triumphalist narratives' offered by many who have studied the American army, Linn finds that problems of retention, the inability to construct policy and doctrine consistent with the realities of American politics and culture, and the failure to devote sufficient emphasis on preparing for war or care for personnel have consistently plagued the army. With a sharp eye for the telling anecdote, he demonstrates that despite the best intentions of many individuals, historical lessons have often remained unlearned rather than learned.""--Robert Wooster, Regents Professor of History, Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi (retired), and author of The United States Army and the Making of America: From Confederation to Empire, 1775-1903""This may be the best of Brian Linn's many distinguished books. Real Soldiering combines the archival and quantitative depth of Elvis's Army with the thematic range of The Echo of Battle. Every chapter is chock full of insights. No other work explores the inner histories of the peacetime US Army with such nuance and attention to underlying continuities. Uniquely valuable for students of the US Army, scholars of military institutions, and American historians.""--Samuel J. Watson, professor of history, United States Military Academy, and author of Peacekeepers and Conquerors: The Army Officer Corps on the American Frontier, 1821-1846 ""Brian Linn has written another masterpiece. Real Soldiering tells the story of the US Army not in war but in peacetime and how it has learned, and not learned, from the major wars it had just fought. Real Soldiering should be read widely within the US Army and US National Security Establishment. Its insights should shape how the US Army thinks about war and conflict today and in the future.""--Colonel Gian Gentile (US Army retired) author of Wrong Turn: America's Deadly Embrace of Counterinsurgency" Author InformationBrian McAllister Linn is professor of history at Texas A&M and the author of The Philippine War, 1899-1902, The Echo of Battle: The Army’s Way of War, and three other books. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |