The Tainan Air Group in WWII Volume One: New Guinea. This
book is the first detailed English language history of a
Japanese air unit. It covers the history of the Tainan Naval
Air Group in New Guinea, including its Rabaul operatons,
from 1 April through to mid-November 1942, accurately
portraying the Air Group's unit markings. The research is
first class, and supported by a vast amount of quality
colour artwork: 2D aircraft profiles and 3D action shots.
There are also many black and white photos, most of them
never published before.
New in card cover - 352pp, 300 b/w
photos, 110 + colour profiles and 3D artwork, 7 colour
maps
Tainan
Research & Publishing, 2012
ISBN 9780473217631
MI6: THE HISTORY OF THE SECRET INTELLIGENCE SERVICE 1909-1949
by Keith Jeffery
The history of the Secret Intelligence Service, written
with full and unrestricted access to the closed archives of
the Service for the period 1909–1949. Essential reading for
anyone interested in the history of espionage, the two world
wars, modern British government and the conduct of
international relations in the first half of the twentieth
century.
Originally
published in 1828 by Edwin Scrantom, Rochester, NY, this is a
very understanding account of the numerous wars fought between
the white colonists and the Native American Indians. Sanders
presents a brief history of the wars with the Indians in the
Eastern United States, focussing particularly on New England and
the Ohio and Indiana Territories. The book also contains an
interesting section that addresses Indian cultural issues.
An urgent warning from a senior military commander.
Closely modelled on the author's NATO experience of war
gaming future conflicts, this is a chilling account of where
we are heading if we fail to recognise the threat posed by
the Russian president. Written by the recently retired
Deputy Supreme Allied Commander Europe and endorsed by
senior military figures, this book shows how war with Russia
could erupt with the bloodiest and most appalling
consequences if the necessary steps are not taken urgently.
A memoir of the 1914-1918 War. When he
volunteered in 1914, A.M.Bown was a twenty-year-old scholar
at Oxford studying science. He became an artillery subaltern
and remained one throughout the First World War, being
wounded twice and gaining the Military Cross for bravery.
This book, although fictionalised, grew out of his personal
experiences and is a vivid and authentic account. He tells
of ordinary day-to-day incidents, some amusing, some
frightening, and gives a sense of real lives - and real
deaths. He keeps throughout a respect for his fellow
soldiers.