Soul of Battle: From Ancient Times to the Present Day, how Three Great Liberators Who Vanquished Tyranny FROM THE PUBLISHER
What motivates armies to win, whatever the odds? In this vigorous account of the campaigns of three brilliant generals from World War II, the Civil War, and Ancient Greece, Victor Davis Hanson advances a provocative theory: that the moral vision they imparted to their troops was as significant as any military strategy. Each general aimed at salvation rather than conquest; and each one led largely untrained forces to striking victory over tyrannical enemies.
In August 1944, George S. Patton began pushing the Americans of his newly formed Third Army into Germany at such blistering speed that in nine months he would crush the Nazis and liberate the death camps. In his famous Civil War March to the Sea, William Tecumseh Sherman led a motley army across the South, ravaging the landscape, liberating slaves and demoralizing the Confederacy. And in the fourth century B.C., Theban General Epaminondas marched an army of farmers nearly two hundred miles to defeat the long invincible Spartan military empire. Thought provoking as well as stirring, The Soul of Battle is narrative history at its best.
FROM THE CRITICS
John Lehman - Wall Street Journal
The most enjoyable histories from Gibbon to Stephen Ambrose are written by authors with a strong point of view and robust prose. Victor Davis Hanson's The Soul of Battle fits right in.
Bernard Knox
Rich and fascinating detail...More an essay on the ethical nature of democracies at war than a purely military history of three epic marches for freedom, for it claims that on rare occasions throughout the ages there can be a soul, not merely a spirit, in the way men battle.
&151; New York Times Book Review
Publishers Weekly
Hanson, a scholar of classics as well as of military history (The Western Way of War), depicts three great armies under three great captains: Epaminondas of Thebes, William T. Sherman and George S. Patton. Their enemies--respectively, Sparta, the Confederacy, the Nazis--had been considered unstoppable. Yet they were defeated not by professional soldiers but by citizen-soldiers turned quickly into ruthlessly efficient fighting forces. It is no contradiction, Hanson argues, that democracies can produce such fierce killers. On the contrary, democracies, he writes, are uniquely suited to quickly mustering forces, imbuing them with "near-messianic zeal... to exterminate what they understand as evil, have them follow to their deaths the most ruthless of men, and then melt anonymously back into the culture that produced them." To accomplish this, he says, a democracy requires both a clear cause and a leader of genius. Hanson presents his three generals as examples of such leaders. Each man led forces seeking to liberate others, whether serfs in Sparta or slaves in the American South or Europeans tyrannized by Hitler. Hanson's thesis, however, is not self-evident: it is still a matter of debate, for example, whether Epaminondas fought to liberate Sparta's serfs or, less idealistically, to strike a decisive blow against Thebes's mortal enemy; similarly, the Union did not fight the Confederacy solely or even mainly to liberate the slaves (and the Confederacy, too, was made of citizen-soldiers who had, if anything, more devotion to their cause than most Union fighters). Nevertheless, Hanson delivers an eloquent reminder that democracies under great captains, facing enemies challenging the essence of their cultures, can make war at levels beyond the worst nightmares of their warrior opponents. (Oct.) Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.
KLIATT
Military officers who reach the rank of general are plentiful in any army. Generals who can win battles are much more rare, as any war will demonstrate. But generals capable of winning major campaigns and entire wars are terribly scarce indeed. This discrepancy is a problem that has bedeviled military academies for generations; the great captains seldom appear out of the ranks of orthodox general officers, even the most capable. How, then, can a nation find them when they are most needed? Victor Hanson addresses that problem by examining the lives and personalities of three of this rare and singular breed who led free peoples to victory in times of desperate crisis: Epaminondas in ancient Greece, the Civil War's William Tecumseh Sherman, and George S. Patton in WW II. The three are well chosen. Each arose from the citizenry; each epitomized the type of leadership capable of inspiring mass armies; and each ultimately defeated the finest fighting machines of his day. Epaminodas' campaigns against the Spartans proved to be crucial in preserving Western civilization as we know it. Sherman defined war and then proceeded to prove it, thereby shortening the Civil War by a year. And of all the Allied combat commanders in Europe, Patton was the only one the Wehrmacht actually feared. Hanson is a professor of classics at California State University, Fresno, and has written extensively about the military affairs of the ancient Greeks. Not surprisingly, this section of the book is particularly strong. All three leaders and their times come alive in this book, and he shows particular zeal in attacking Patton's detractors. This is serious military history, but it reads like popular history andwill be relished by anyone with any interest in military affairs. YAs will like the readable style and, of course, the battle scenes. Along the way, they will also learn about the personality traits that make a good leader, on and off the battlefield. Recommended to school, academic and public libraries. KLIATT Codes: SA*Exceptional book, recommended for senior high school students, advanced students, and adults. 1999, Random House, Anchor, 480p. notes. bibliog. index., $16.00. Ages 16 to adult. Reviewer: Raymond L. Puffer; Ph.D., Historian, Edwards Air Force Base, CA , September 2001 (Vol. 35 No. 5)
Library Journal
A simple recipe: take three unorthodox, unpredictable, intellectual military leaders; mix them up with an army of free men; and give them a democratic mission. You have created what Hanson (The Western Way of War and Fields Without Dreams) calls The Soul of Battle, "a rare thing that arises only when free men march unabashedly toward the heartland of their enemy in hopes of saving the doomed." Hanson describes the military careers of Epaminondas, a Thespian philosopher-general who organized an army of free men and destroyed forever the despotic state of Sparta; Gen. William Sherman, who organized Midwestern farmers and marched through Georgia, destroying cities and plantations while freeing slaves; and Gen. George Patton, whose Third Army rapidly thrust through France and Germany to the Czech border. This is a great book. Hanson has a gift for grasping the personality traits and failings that made these three military leaders so unique. He gives the finest account of the exploits of the little-known Epaminondas this reviewer has seen in English and comes closer to grasping the essence of that complex character Patton than his biographers. The reader may wish to consult Alexander Bevins's How Great Generals Win to see how these three leaders utilized many of the same approaches. For all public and military collections.--Richard S. Nowicki, Emerson Vocational H.S., Buffalo, NY Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.
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