Strategy Six Pack 5 (Illustrated) - Elbert Hubbard

Strategy Six Pack 5 (Illustrated)

By Elbert Hubbard

  • Release Date: 2015-08-20
  • Genre: European History

Description

“In the midst of chaos, there is also opportunity.”
― Sun Tzu, The Art of War

Strategy Six Pack 5 presents a smart sextet of tactical texts:

A Treatise on Tactics by Francis J. Lippitt
A Tale of the English Civil War by G. A. Henty
Genghis Khan by Jacob Abbott
The Boer War by Arthur Conan Doyle
Morgan's Raid by Basil W. Duke, Orlando B. Willcox & Thomas H. Hines
Garibaldi by Elbert Hubbard

Francis J. Lippitt’s A Treatise on Tactics is a detailed, sophisticated mid-Victorian survey delineating trends in military thinking as relates to the three branches of Infantry, Artillery and Cavalry. Morgan’s Raid by Basil W. Duke, Orlando B. Willcox & Thomas H. Hines – three participants of the famous Civil War skirmish – is a forgotten military classic and includes the raid, capture and escape of Confederate general John Hunt Morgan and his troops, known as Morgan’s Men. Evidently Sherlock Holmes’ creator Arthur Conan Doyle had a lot to say about the Boer War. By the end of hostilities in 1902, his book The Boer War (originally published as The War in South Africa, Its Cause and Conduct) had been published 16 times, with each edition revised by Doyle. The mystery maestro brings the same analytical skills displayed in his fiction to this definitive look at the 1899-1902 conflict. There is also G. A. Henty’s richly descriptive novel A Tale of the English Civil War, Garibaldi, a biography of the Italian general, and Genghis Khan by Jacob Abbott, a look at the life of the founder and Great Khan of the Mongol Empire.

Illustrations include:

King Charles I of England
The Battle of Marston Moor, 1644
Oliver Cromwell
The 1st Khagan of the Mongol Empire
Genghis Khan entering Beijing
John Hunt Morgan
Thomas H. Hines
Basil W. Duke
Orlando B. Willcox
Morgan’s Men
Giuseppe Garibaldi
Elbert Green Hubbard

“A wise man gets more use from his enemies than a fool from his friends.”
― Baltasar Gracián