Author |
|
John Popa Byrne Robotics Member

Joined: 20 March 2008 Posts: 4643
|
Posted: 30 June 2025 at 12:59pm | IP Logged | 1
|
post reply
|
|
Currently working through "The Only Life That Mattered" by James L. Nelson, the story of Anne Bonny, Mary Read and Calico Jack Ratham. It's historical fiction but, as I understand it, only one event depicted in the novel is truly invented, the other events are at least based on documented accounts of the people involved.
|
Back to Top |
profile
| search
|
|
Craig Earl Byrne Robotics Member

Joined: 13 July 2019 Location: United Kingdom Posts: 1531
|
Posted: 30 June 2025 at 3:24pm | IP Logged | 2
|
post reply
|
|
Just finished Frederic Brremaud and Federico Bertolucci's LOVE: THE MASTIFF, the latest in the hardcover 'LOVE' series.
For those unfamiliar, they are wordless graphic novels, beautifully illustrated (previous titles are THE FOX, THE TIGER, THE LION, THE DINOSAUR, all of which I have on my bookshelf).
Check them out; they're excellent!
|
Back to Top |
profile
| search
|
|
Wallace Sellars Byrne Robotics Member

Joined: 01 May 2004 Location: United States Posts: 17737
|
Posted: 30 June 2025 at 8:36pm | IP Logged | 3
|
post reply
|
|
I recently finished the fifth (and final) Jane Hawk but, and I’m currently a third of the way through DUNGEON CRAWLER CARL.
|
Back to Top |
profile
| search
| www
|
|
John Byrne
Grumpy Old Guy
Joined: 11 May 2005 Posts: 134708
|
Posted: 30 June 2025 at 8:45pm | IP Logged | 4
|
post reply
|
|
CITY AT WORLD’S END by Edmund HamiltonFor probably the fortieth time. Like visiting old friends.
|
Back to Top |
profile
| search
|
|
Doug Centers Byrne Robotics Member

Joined: 17 February 2014 Location: United States Posts: 5706
|
Posted: 06 July 2025 at 1:09pm | IP Logged | 5
|
post reply
|
|
A few chapters into THE GUNS AT LAST LIGHT by Atkinson, the final book in the liberation trilogy. The war in Western Europe.
Something that has left an indelible mark on me during these readings was the incredible amount of fratricide that took place. General Omar Bradley himself said about it that GI's were "nothing more than tools to be used in the accomplishment of the mission".
|
Back to Top |
profile
| search
|
|
John Byrne
Grumpy Old Guy
Joined: 11 May 2005 Posts: 134708
|
Posted: 06 July 2025 at 1:18pm | IP Logged | 6
|
post reply
|
|
…fratricide…••• Is that the word you meant? I’d not previously considered WW2 in terms of brothers killing brothers.
|
Back to Top |
profile
| search
|
|
Michael Penn Byrne Robotics Member

Joined: 12 April 2006 Location: United States Posts: 12963
|
Posted: 06 July 2025 at 2:16pm | IP Logged | 7
|
post reply
|
|
The term "fratricide" in this context meant Americans killing Americans.
|
Back to Top |
profile
| search
|
|
John Byrne
Grumpy Old Guy
Joined: 11 May 2005 Posts: 134708
|
Posted: 06 July 2025 at 2:27pm | IP Logged | 8
|
post reply
|
|
Isn’t that more commonly called “friendly fire”?The Civil War is really all about deliberate fratricide.
|
Back to Top |
profile
| search
|
|
Doug Centers Byrne Robotics Member

Joined: 17 February 2014 Location: United States Posts: 5706
|
Posted: 06 July 2025 at 2:27pm | IP Logged | 9
|
post reply
|
|
Correct Michael.It's the term used throughout the trilogy to refer to "friendly fire".
|
Back to Top |
profile
| search
|
|
Michael Penn Byrne Robotics Member

Joined: 12 April 2006 Location: United States Posts: 12963
|
Posted: 06 July 2025 at 2:48pm | IP Logged | 10
|
post reply
|
|
I just happen to know this, but Army Field Manuals have used "fratricide" over "friendly fire" officially since the 1990s. It has become in the military the preferred term.
[As the old Bradley quote shows, sometimes the death of our own men at the hands of their comrades in arms to achieve an objective is expected, even figured into the strategy, and comes under the heading in Field Manuals of "risk management." War is all hell.]
|
Back to Top |
profile
| search
|
|
Edward Aycock Byrne Robotics Member

Joined: 13 July 2024 Location: United States Posts: 57
|
Posted: 06 July 2025 at 11:02pm | IP Logged | 11
|
post reply
|
|
I just finished "The Joy Luck Club" which I really enjoyed. It's more a series of vignettes than a novel so it can be easily read in pieces.
Now I am reading a novel about the Triangle Shirtwaist factory, a story that has always held a morbid fascination for me. It's aimed at Young Adults but it's pretty uncompromising about what the workers had to deal with.
|
Back to Top |
profile
| search
|
|