That bloody wind’s still blowing!



After a brief respite the hand problem returned - serves me right for getting cocky. Nevertheless, despite the necessity of bits of plastering and subsequent painting etc., the appendiges do seem to be making some improvement. A visit to yet another specialist (very attractive young Polish woman this time) has resulted in a new treatment regime and a promise that ”We will become very good friends” – cor! Unfortunately, she was referring to the management of the ‘condition’ rather than anything else. So, painting is still a struggle (and typing’s a pig), but, during the interregnum, at least I got a battalion finished and polished off an ECW Royalist field officer who may yet find his way into a cavalry unit.




Shame really, as, aside from the assembly line stuff, I’ve got some more stimulating things ready to roll. I have begun to suspect that somebody sits there plotting my downfall. There’s going to be a funny side to all this, but I’m struggling to see it.


Yet still at night I am haunted by the fright
And distant memory
Of the day I lost the light
Moving through the night
Running from the grand ennui”


Anyone identify this song?


So, thought I’d do some more book recommendations as the last lot kept the well from drying up. I do actually spend my time doing more than reading, but I’m sure you’re not interested in a chronicle of my real world activity.



Culloden – John Prebble (Pimlico; New Ed edition (2 May 2002); ISBN-10: 0712668209)


It’s the 300th anniversary of The ’15 and the 270th of The ’45, so I thought it was an appropriate time to re-read this one, particularly as Edwin King (Diplomatist Books) laid temptation in my path.


I assumed everyone knew about The ’45, but it came up in conversation at a sort of party, get together thing a few weeks ago (“So, what have you been reading lately?). It turned out that, while everybody knew about Bonnie Prince Charlie and even about Flora McThingy’s ferry service, slightly fewer had hear of The ’45. So much for the SNP’s play on words last year - Ms Sturgeon would have been spitting blood by this time.


Prebble’s book reads almost like a novel, but with few heroes and plenty of utter swines on all sides. Nobody comes up smelling of roses; it’s a sort of race to the bottom of human behaviour and I’m not entirely sure who wins. The Highlanders and who actually supported the Jacobite cause (often unwillingly) and many innocent civilians are clearly the victims of the failed rebellion and suffer at the hands of the English soldiers, Scottish auxiliaries, Highlanders from other clans and even their own lairds. 


Altogether, it’s an important book and pretty much a standard on Culloden and its background. It contains good information on Life as a regular soldier and the social structure of the clans. It’s not absolutely unbiased, but it’s as near as I’ve seen and it’s a difficult period of history to deal with in any case. It was a brutal time in which life was cheap and got cheaper the lower down the greasy pole you were.



Dunkirk: Fight to the Last Man (75th Anniversary Edition) - Hugh Sebag-Montefiore (Penguin (30 April 2015); ISBN-10: 0241972264)


I’ve read this before, about five years ago, but, as this is the 75th anniversary edition and it was only about three quid from Tesco’s, I thought I’d see what it had to offer. Essentially, nothing much different from the original edition, so, if you’ve got that, stick with it. This special edition has had the footnotes removed (though they’re all available online) to make room for more personal accounts and appendices. However, it’s still a very well written account of the 1940 French campaign up to and including Dunkirk.



Battlefields in Miniature : Making Realistic and Effective Terrain for Wargames – Paul  Davies (Pen & Sword Military (28 May 2015); ISBN-10: 1781592748)



This isn’t really the sort of book you read through, but it’s an excellent book and well worth the price. It contains plenty of hints and tips, basic concepts and more skilled aspects of terrain construction. At this point I should probably say something like “Carlsberg don’t produce a book on terrain modelling, but if they did . . . .”


 


Marlboroughs Other Army. The British Army and the Campaigns of the First Peninsula War, 1702-12 (Century of the Soldier 1618-1721) – Nick Dorrell (Helion & Company (7 May 2015); ISBN-10: 1910294632)



This is the one you’ve been waiting for! Raced through it – easy to read and a wargamer’s dream of a book. The good thing (there’s only one?) is that at last the less popular Iberian campaign is easily accessible to gamers in a digestible form. It covers organisation, orders of battle, maps and uniforms as well of a very readable narrative of the campaign(s). It’s part of the new ‘Century of the Soldier’ series from Pen and Sword and it’s set the bar pretty high for any following publications in the series.


 


As you might expect, you’re not getting away without some fiction and this time it’s sci-fi and fantasy, old(er) and new.


The Death of Grass – John Christopher (Penguin Classics (2 April 2009); ISBN-10: 0141190175)



Thoughtful sci-fi written not long after the war, but years ahead of its time. A virus, which attacks all grass related plants (so most food crops and consequently livestock etc.)  has originated in China and is spreading across the globe. What can humans do and how can they cope?


By now, this is a somewhat dated book and it’s steeped in the post war period in both style and content, but it’s very well written and a real page turner. My copy has already been lost, ‘acquired’ by family vultures and since passed on to God knows where. Typical.


 


Foxglove Summer – Ben Aaranovitch (Gollancz (9 July 2015); ISBN-10: 0575132523)



Aaranovitch began a series of books a few years ago about a special department in the Metropolitan Police . The department deals with all supernatural events within the Met area (and later outside also) where rivers have associated minor gods and magic is a common basis for crime and sedition. Yes, he’s been reading one of those books again.


Foxglove Summer is the latest in the series, and can be read in its own right, but, do yourself a favour and begin with the first volume. Comedy hovers just beneath the surface of a high quality text and, if this is your cup of tea, you whip through it in no time.




Comments

  1. Glad to hear their might be a polish solution to the problem, Battlefields in Miniature sounds and apparently looks good, the others sound good too!

    ReplyDelete
  2. A Polish specialist ah??? You naughty boy!!
    Lovely looking figure too, far to polished (get it??) to be lost in a unit.
    I do like the sound of the Marlborough book, if, I said if I ever had the chance to paint up the period I'd do the Peninsula. Probably never will, the NYW's just a bit too close. I may well dip a foot into the Aaronovitch books, I need a new series to read, it'll have to wait for book 12 of TW Brown Dead series though. If you like Zombie books take a look at them, they're a good read.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Really interesting read, thanks. Sorry to hear your hands are still troubling you. Let's hope that your Polish friend can make a difference,

    Best wishes,
    Aaron

    ReplyDelete
  4. Glad you enjoyed the Prebble - let me know when I can tempt you again!

    The Wife and I have read the first two of Aaronovitch's books and enjoyed them a lot.

    I hope your Polish specialist does her thing and the hand sorts out. I think I'm get basal thumb problems ;(

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. If I'm right and that sounds like arthritis, you have my complete sympathy. Had an aunt who worked ina cotton mill all her life and ended up with it in both her hands. There's nothing nice you can say about it. :O(

      Delete
  5. Hope the Polish can help you Gaz, although I feel sorry for her having to be that close to a grumpy old Salfordian. Look after yerself mate.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Thanks for the support gents. I'm happy to report that, since I typed that lot, I've only incurred a couple of small 'splits' which means the new regime appears to be having a good effect. Still no proper sense of touch though, but I can't really complain. I don't want to jeapordise the chance of more frequent visits to Miss Poland. ;O)

    ReplyDelete
  7. O.K., nobody mentioned it, so the verse from the song is taken from "Grand Ennui" by Mike Nesmith and The First National Band's 1971 'Nevada Fighter' album.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment