Quote: (02-07-2019 04:25 PM)Subtext Wrote:
Quote: (01-30-2019 07:49 AM)Paracelsus Wrote:
The Legend of Deathwalker, David Gemmell
![[Image: th?id=OIP.IA3vKxAzbO5H7QLT-_FToQAAAA&w=1...=5&pid=1.7]](https://www.bing.com/th?id=OIP.IA3vKxAzbO5H7QLT-_FToQAAAA&w=179&h=299&c=7&o=5&pid=1.7)
Prequels as a rule suck. Even Star Wars couldn't get around this. When I first read this book maybe 10 years back I skipped through it believing that.
Read it properly this time. It's good; not as good as Legend, which was Gemmell's first and greatest book, but there's a lot of nuggets in this to chew over. If you haven't read Legend, do it. If you have, this one isn't too bad at all.
What kind of book are we talking about here? What kind of story? It looks intriguing.
Fantasy. If you like the style of fantasy that isn't heavy on details, avoids strong wimminz, and is pretty masculine, you might well like it. This book itself is basically a small bunch of tribesmen (plus the protagonist) defending a shrine against 2000 men, but I think it works best if you read the book
Legend first, which is seriously good.
Quote: (02-07-2019 04:29 PM)Subtext Wrote:
Quote: (01-22-2019 06:17 AM)Paracelsus Wrote:
American Sniper, Chris Kyle
![[Image: th?id=OIP._5xENSF_Cg9YzcAaLXdgpAHaLK&w=1...=5&pid=1.7]](https://www.bing.com/th?id=OIP._5xENSF_Cg9YzcAaLXdgpAHaLK&w=198&h=300&c=7&o=5&pid=1.7)
Superb.
So many thoughts on this one, but the main one is that if you want a picture of American resolve at its strongest, combined with inability to see the strings that everyone is dangled on, read this book.
So, are you saying that Chris was naive? I've always struggled with this question: does worldliness have a negative impact on one's ability to forge resolve?
sigh
There are two sides to the Chris Kyle story.
On one side there is the military story. Whether Kyle started to talk a lot of shit after he came out of Iraq, nobody seriously seems to have any basis to question his record as a sniper. Kyle is credited with 160 confirmed kills, confirmed meaning that he had a witness who verified the shot and the kill. In the book he doesn't cite a specific number, but the Navy doesn't dispute it, and that would make him the deadliest sniper in the US armed forces as at the current date, the second being Carlos Hathcock from the Marines with 93 sniper kills during the Vietnam War. The man qualified first for one of the most mentally tough units (the SEALS) and then qualified for one of the tougher units (sniper school) out of that.
He comes across as straight and blunt about what he was doing over there and very black and white. He matter-of-fact speaks of the WMD elements he saw, and given the guy was in the sort of unit sent in to disable or secure that sort of shit ahead of regular troops, I see no reason to dispute his account, Saddam fans notwithstanding. On top of that there are his associations -- most notably with Marcus Luttrell, a.k.a. the titular lone survivor out of the film and book
Lone Survivor.
Kyle comes across as what a US citizen is capable of if he's given sufficient motivation. Hard as fuck, ruthless if need be. He is a perfect example of the kind of man who is needed and indispensable so a nation can have soft by comparison, privileged men like ourselves can wring our hands about democracy and fairness and the rule of law. Quintus Curtius I think once observed the difference between a nation's praetorians and its borderers, and Kyle falls firmly in the second category.
But:
Put it this way, one of the
de rigeur pictures in the centre of the book is of Kyle receiving an award from a Jewish advocacy organisation for his service to the US. Cringeworthy and it sums up the seesawing feelings I had for this book.
More generally, if you've read about the outright incompetence of the US Armed Forces generally, and the showboating idiocy on display from the SEALS in particular from guys like John T. Reed, you tend to be less impressed by the superhero image these services seek to create. And Kyle at least bears that out in that he identifies, as a lot of people from John T Reed to Dan Simmons have, that it's mainly the Rules of Engagement that are at fault, i.e. the insane rule that says as soon as a camelfucker puts his AK-47 down and walks away, you're not allowed to shoot him.
To take the example of Marcus Luttrell again, the main reason he wound up a "hero" was because of flat-out operational incompetence twice over: first, when their cover was blown, the rules of engagement said they couldn't shoot the kids who discovered them. Said kids immediately ran off and told their goatfucking friends that said SEALS were there. Secondly, when the team was surrounded, the intended method of extraction was to send a helicopter in ... in territory where every second goatfucker has a RPG. And which got another 10-20 men killed.
SEALS are not built for that sort of extraction and are not supermen. They are lightly armed and if detected have to scream for evacuation from heavier armed infantry or armor units (as indeed happened to Chris Kyle in Iraq on one occasion).
It was the same sort of operational fuckup due to a superman image that got the Rangers and Delta Force into shit in the Battle of Mogadishu in 1993, a.k.a. Black Hawk Down. The US cannot fight its wars with small commando teams alone, and it can't fight its wars with one arm tied behind its back.
Remissas, discite, vivet.
God save us from people who mean well. -storm