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If it's not too much trouble, a list of VietNam air war books you would
recommend...thanks in advance- P. C. Chisholm CDR, USN(ret.) Old Phart Phormer Phantom, Turkey, Viper, Scooter and Combat Buckeye Phlyer |
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![]() "Pechs1" wrote in message If it's not too much trouble, a list of VietNam air war books you would recommend...thanks in advance- P. C. Chisholm No libraries in your village? |
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BYU- No libraries in your village? BRBR
Sure, the same library that is hosting the Rocky Mtn Peace and Justice center's peace demnostration this WE...questions?? P. C. Chisholm CDR, USN(ret.) Old Phart Phormer Phantom, Turkey, Viper, Scooter and Combat Buckeye Phlyer |
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Thanks again Ed. I have read your book, of course, really excellent as well as
"11 Days". I am reading "From the Flight Deck" now, an anthology of carrier warfare writings. P. C. Chisholm CDR, USN(ret.) Old Phart Phormer Phantom, Turkey, Viper, Scooter and Combat Buckeye Phlyer |
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On 4 Feb 2004 09:21:01 -0800, (John Pelchat)
wrote: Ed Rasimus wrote in message . .. On 03 Feb 2004 15:05:04 GMT, (Pechs1) wrote: If it's not too much trouble, a list of VietNam air war books you would recommend...thanks in advance- P. C. Chisholm Some books I didn't like a Broughton's "Going Downtown", but "Thud Ridge" is pretty good. Ken Bell's "100 Missions North". John Trotti's "Phantom Over Vietnam" Karl Eschmann's "Linebacker" Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" Smithsonian Institution Press ISBN #1-58834-103-8 While I am not interested in starting a mud-slinging session or an excahange of flames, I am interested in why you did not like "Phantom Over Vietnam". I wasn't there (too young)and only have the accounts of others to learn from. Thanks in advance & blue skies . . . Good question. I know John Trotti and have exchanged emails with him. Good guy and good combat Marine aviator. I simply didn't like the book because it compiled mission events into single missions, seemingly making them more intense and it described some defensive reactions in areas that such was extremely unlikely. I simply felt it didn't meet my criteria for contribution to the genre. I didn't like Broughton's second book because it was almost totally dedicated to an apologia for the Turkestan incident. Didn't like Bell's book because it recounts a series of his screwups and doesn't even acknowledge that they were screwups. Eschmann's work doesn't do much but recount B-52 missions while totally ignoring the daytime tactical ops of Linebacker II and the supporting night tactical flights. Michel does a much better job of shedding light on what went on. Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" Smithsonian Institution Press ISBN #1-58834-103-8 |
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Ed Rasimus wrote:
On 03 Feb 2004 15:05:04 GMT, (Pechs1) wrote: If it's not too much trouble, a list of VietNam air war books you would recommend...thanks in advance- P. C. Chisholm CDR, USN(ret.) Old Phart Phormer Phantom, Turkey, Viper, Scooter and Combat Buckeye Phlyer Naturally, "When Thunder Rolled"!!! Seriously, the question would have to be if you are seeking historical data or memoirs. In the historical side, I like John Sherwood's oral history, "Fast Movers" although some folks panned it on Amazon saying it didn't deal with enough USN stuff. I think there's a lot of A-4, A-7, A-6 coverage. The best collection of ancedotes book on the naval (and Marine, a little) air war in Vietnam that I've read is "Alpha Strike Vietnam: The Navy's Air War 1964-1973", by Jeffrey L. Levinson. Other than that, I largely concur with Ed's list, although my opinions vary some from his in a few cases. Marshall Michel's "Clashes" covers the MiG engagements, but is flawed in that he doesn't name participants and only uses call-sign for engagements. If you are familiar, you can discern Olds, Richie, Cunningham, Madden and others. Not a flaw, a deliberate decision to keep it impersonal owing to the large span of time and number of engagements he was covering, and the fact that he was trying to show operational and tactical trends, not determine who was the WGFP. His second work, "Eleven Days of Christmas" is excellent. It really highlights the bureaucratic snafus of SAC vs USAF on the Linebacker II campaign as well as giving the NVN perspective of the battle. Concur, especially with his comparison of claims and losses using _both_ sides' sources, the only way a true historian should work if he's able. Last correspondence I had with him, he was working on a Korean Air War book, with access to the Soviet sources as well as U.S./allied ones. Wayne Thompson's "To Hanoi and Back" may be the best overview of the entire air war over NVN. Haven't read that one yet, although I have had one negative review from someone who felt it was far too much parroting the official line. Since Richard P. Hallion was the co-author that wouldn't surprise me a bit -- I've found many of his other books to suffer from the same problem. Unsurprising, as he is the USAF's official historian, but I prefer historians who approach their subjects doing a better job of restraining their inbuilt biases, and who have a more cynical outlook towards the officially approved version, but question and check all such claims. Like Marshall Michel, who demonstrates far more objectivity than Hallion, at least has ever shown in his books that dealt with USAF operations. Jeff Ethell's "One Day in a Long War" which details the activity of May 10, 1972, the start of Linebacker is great. You get the AF attack on Doumer Bridge and Cunningham's three kills and bailout all in one book. Excellent book. Let's not forget to give credit to Dr. Alfred Price, Ethell's co-author (they also collaborated on "Air War South Atlantic," doing a far better job on covering the Falklands War from both sides shortly after it ended, than anyone had a right to expect). A great reference is Chris Hobson's "Vietnam Air Losses" which chronologically lists all the fixed wing losses of the entire war with names, tail numbers and a short account of the loss. Zalin Grant's "Over the Beach" is a great USN book about operations from Oriskany. John Nichols "On Yankee Station" is also excellent. Agreed on both. And for a personal (and posthumous) memoir, "The Heart of a Man," by Frank (and Marilyn) Elkins, is back in print. For a somewhat less personal overview of Naval and Marine Air in Vietnam than "On Yankee Station," there's Mersky and Polmar's "The Naval Air War in Vietnam." Some books I didn't like a Broughton's "Going Downtown", but "Thud Ridge" is pretty good. Personally, I preferred "Going Downtown" because Broughton could be less elliptical than he had to be in Thud Ridge, but I agree that he does get tiresome. Ken Bell's "100 Missions North". Liked it a lot more than you did, more than "Pak Six", but that's probably my bias towards the historical and technological side of things. John Trotti's "Phantom Over Vietnam" Big disagreement between us here. Karl Eschmann's "Linebacker" I prefer Clodfelter's "Limits of Airpower," and of course Michels' "The Eleven Days of Christmas." Guy |
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Ed Rasimus wrote:
On 03 Feb 2004 15:05:04 GMT, (Pechs1) wrote: If it's not too much trouble, a list of VietNam air war books you would recommend...thanks in advance- P. C. Chisholm CDR, USN(ret.) Old Phart Phormer Phantom, Turkey, Viper, Scooter and Combat Buckeye Phlyer Naturally, "When Thunder Rolled"!!! Seriously, the question would have to be if you are seeking historical data or memoirs. In the historical side, I like John Sherwood's oral history, "Fast Movers" although some folks panned it on Amazon saying it didn't deal with enough USN stuff. I think there's a lot of A-4, A-7, A-6 coverage. The best collection of ancedotes book on the naval (and Marine, a little) air war in Vietnam that I've read is "Alpha Strike Vietnam: The Navy's Air War 1964-1973", by Jeffrey L. Levinson. Other than that, I largely concur with Ed's list, although my opinions vary some from his in a few cases. Marshall Michel's "Clashes" covers the MiG engagements, but is flawed in that he doesn't name participants and only uses call-sign for engagements. If you are familiar, you can discern Olds, Richie, Cunningham, Madden and others. Not a flaw, a deliberate decision to keep it impersonal owing to the large span of time and number of engagements he was covering, and the fact that he was trying to show operational and tactical trends, not determine who was the WGFP. His second work, "Eleven Days of Christmas" is excellent. It really highlights the bureaucratic snafus of SAC vs USAF on the Linebacker II campaign as well as giving the NVN perspective of the battle. Concur, especially with his comparison of claims and losses using _both_ sides' sources, the only way a true historian should work if he's able. Last correspondence I had with him, he was working on a Korean Air War book, with access to the Soviet sources as well as U.S./allied ones. Wayne Thompson's "To Hanoi and Back" may be the best overview of the entire air war over NVN. Haven't read that one yet, although I have had one negative review from someone who felt it was far too much parroting the official line. Since Richard P. Hallion was the co-author that wouldn't surprise me a bit -- I've found many of his other books to suffer from the same problem. Unsurprising, as he is the USAF's official historian, but I prefer historians who approach their subjects doing a better job of restraining their inbuilt biases, and who have a more cynical outlook towards the officially approved version, but question and check all such claims. Like Marshall Michel, who demonstrates far more objectivity than Hallion, at least has ever shown in his books that dealt with USAF operations. Jeff Ethell's "One Day in a Long War" which details the activity of May 10, 1972, the start of Linebacker is great. You get the AF attack on Doumer Bridge and Cunningham's three kills and bailout all in one book. Excellent book. Let's not forget to give credit to Dr. Alfred Price, Ethell's co-author (they also collaborated on "Air War South Atlantic," doing a far better job on covering the Falklands War from both sides shortly after it ended, than anyone had a right to expect). A great reference is Chris Hobson's "Vietnam Air Losses" which chronologically lists all the fixed wing losses of the entire war with names, tail numbers and a short account of the loss. Zalin Grant's "Over the Beach" is a great USN book about operations from Oriskany. John Nichols "On Yankee Station" is also excellent. Agreed on both. And for a personal (and posthumous) memoir, "The Heart of a Man," by Frank (and Marilyn) Elkins, is back in print. For a somewhat less personal overview of Naval and Marine Air in Vietnam than "On Yankee Station," there's Mersky and Polmar's "The Naval Air War in Vietnam." Some books I didn't like a Broughton's "Going Downtown", but "Thud Ridge" is pretty good. Personally, I preferred "Going Downtown" because Broughton could be less elliptical than he had to be in Thud Ridge, but I agree that he does get tiresome. Ken Bell's "100 Missions North". Liked it a lot more than you did, more than "Pak Six", but that's probably my bias towards the historical and technological side of things. John Trotti's "Phantom Over Vietnam" Big disagreement between us here. Karl Eschmann's "Linebacker" I prefer Clodfelter's "Limits of Airpower," and of course Michels' "The Eleven Days of Christmas." Guy |
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