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Hardcover Boer War Book

ISBN: 0394427424

ISBN13: 9780394427423

Boer War

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good*

*Best Available: (missing dust jacket)

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Book Overview

On October 11th, 1899 long-simmering tensions between Britain and the Boer Republics - the Orange Free State and the Transvaal Republic - finally erupted into the conflict that would become known as... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

6 ratings

The book that was delivered was not the one illustrated, which was the one I ordered and wanted. The

I would have liked to have reviewed the book I ordered

Sensational book

I'm very pleased that Thomas Pakenham's classic has been reissued as an affordable paperback. Now I can stop borrowing the library's hardcover copy. This is without doubt the finest, most authoritative general history of the Boer War. Pakenham's lively writing style makes the book readable and enjoyable, and the scholarship is so good that you know what you are reading is reliable.

Well done!

A well done narrative of the Boer War. Pakenham has written a book which resists the easy path of political correctness and dosen't engage in simple minded ideology. He has attempted to show both sides as truthfully as possible. His one very daring act is the effort to show General Buller in a different light - going against decades of historians that have written him off as nothing but an incompetent. Just another example of the idiots that were in charge of the British military in the ninteenth century, as if comptence in the British Army ceased to exsist after Wellington died. It is a bold attempt and one which I believe Pakenham does very well. Pakenham also excells in his effort to show how very difficult it is to maintain control of troops on the battlefield. Garbeled communications, faulty intelligence,monumental egos, morale, unexpected effects of new weapons metting up with outdated tactics - all of these and more are detailed beautifully by Pakenham. I was somewhat suprised that the Boers are shown as not all conquering and often had even more problems then the British. Their troops were wildly undisciplined and were better at partisan warfare or serving in defensive actions. When it came to offensive action against disciplined troops the Boers were actually miserable failures. This is a common trait found in what is now know as "irregular forces". Pakenham looks at both sides and shows that war could have been avoided at almost every step, but personal and national egos and ambition kept getting in the way. Naturally Pakenham draws the inevitable comparisons to World War One and they are very clear. All in all this is a balanced and very readable work. When I first picked it up I was unsure of what I would find. In the past I've found many of the modern African historians to be extremely left wing and lacking in perspective. Pakenham is an exception to the rule and for that I give him five stars. Well done!

Among the best histories I've read

This is a pet subject for me, so I've digested lots of material on the Boer War. Pakenham's work still, after 30+ years, stands the test of time as one of the most exhaustive and definitive works on the Boer War. Some of the reviews are pointing out the lack of Boer input in Pakenham's research. Much of this was done for two reasons (1) Outside of selected scholarly works in Afrikaans utilized by Pakenham, much of Boer literature on the subject has been twisted into legend, lore and folktales that skew from original events. (2) The two main Boer generals to emerge as South African statesmen after the war, Louis Botha and Jan Smuts, became in many ways more British than Boer. A champion of the empire and internationalism, Smuts wrote the preamble to the UN Charter and opposed the National Party that imposed apartheid two years before his death. All in all, this work is a great overall look at the conflict. Definitely look at his bibliography to delve further.

Wonderfully written a book that is intensely interesting.

One of the final wars of British imperialism, it could be labeled the first "modern" war. Thomas Parkenham does a wonderful job describing the genesis to the unfortunate end of a war that went from a being a bloody slugfest between conventional armies to a guerilla war boarding on a civil war. If you want to understand how a nation can win a war yet lose the peace, here is the story of how Britain "won" two colonies and in reality gave the Boers two of their own in the end. A terrific book recommended for anyone with any remote interest in South African history or the British in Africa. I highly recommend this book.

A must read for anyone who wants to understand modern RSA

A very well researched book. I found it so exciting that I could not lay it down. I buy it for all my visitors to South Africa. It helps to understand how South Africa developed in the past 100 years and provides insight to the emergence of political, social and business developments. Despite the horrors of war, the book describes innovations which occured. Although born in the UK in the end I have great sympathy for the Afrikaaners and the sufferings they endured in the name of preserving South Africa for the crown.
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