books:
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House to House
David Bellavia
Free Press
, 2007 - 336 pages
average customer review:
based on 138 reviews
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highly recommended
Can't Put This Book Down!!
What an amazingly written book! SSG Bellavia writes about his experiences in the war zone so well it was hard to put this book down. My eyes could be weary from reading so many pages, my body could be telling me I need to go to sleep, but I just couldn't find a good place to put this book down. I wanted to turn the next page, I wanted to find out what happened next. Amazing book about sacrifice, honor and TONS of courage. A must read!!
Couldnt put it down
I enjoyed this book. Bellavia did a very good job at recording the little things, like when they are clearing
house
s & they find a MIG 22 being used as a giant house born IED, and the insurgents line the inside walls with propane tanks so if you fire & miss the whole house will go up with you in it & also they use little shards of glass mounted on shelves around corners so they can see exactly when your gonna peak around the corner & take a chunk out of your shoulder.
Very informative.Dont wanna give too much away. Worth the purchase all the way.
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Contradictions of War
I opened this book with a sympathetic perspective, but as I read I became more and more impressed by Bellavia's lack of reflection on some important points. The problems the book has stem from Bellavia's myopic view of operations with the infantry a world unto itself. He also has too much an inclination to ignore proportionality. One cannot help admiring him for his truthfulness about his own feelings and the hell he went through. However, if I were an officer in Iraq, I would think twice about having this NCO under my command. On the one hand, he self-consciously portrays himself as a demanding sergeant who will not tolerate hints of insubordination among his charges. On the other, he brags about disrespecting a major from another unit who happened upon him. (And he doesn't seem to notice the contradiction separated by only a few pages.) He knew nothing about this major apart from the officer's clean appearance, his vehicle, his unit, and his voice. He decided the major was a remf. He did not know if perhaps the day before the major had pulled a wounded soldier from a burning vehicle while under fire--he could not have known. Ballavia drew some conclusions and then stooped to the typical knuckle-dragger reaction of dismissing the officer's credibility out of hand, a hackneyed prop for self-elavation. "Look at me, I'm SSG ROCK," it says, "in contrast to this remf." But what about respecting the fact that the officer was THERE, IN Iraq, IN THE COMBAT ZONE, in a vehicle, could easily bleed out in the next minute from an IED attack? Ballavia's attitude on this point is corrosive to the team spirit of those who have to share the burdens of the war. His attitude as portrayed is amateurish, a self-defeating psychology. The other problem of proportionality is something SSG B may not be able to relate to. In an insurgency, restraint is a critically important force multiplier. SSG B's inclination to overkill is symptomatic of poor preparation for phase IV (stability operations) of a counterinsurgency. Lack of restraint erodes legitimacy and spawns new enemies, preventing the indiginous population from coming over to the counterinsurgent's side. One does not expect, in the heat of battle, for a soldier to hold back; but as a leader, SSG B should have tried to be a moderating influence understanding the COIN environment, knowing that excess breeds its own kharma that will have to be met down the road. Three-stars for a gripping narative. H2H is too raw to rank five stars.
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House to House...a great read
Read this outstanding book on my recent flight to DC and back. It is a great account of urban warfare. Recommended read for others.
Adrenalin pumping
Adrenalin pumping action. This author gives you a first hand look at the almost unbearable stress of door kicking combat. You have to ask yourself how these soldiers take it...............and wonder if you could take it. Faced every day with forcing your way into
houses that
might be an ambush and very well may hold madmen dedicated to killing you is an unending nightmare. To say these soldiers have guts is a gigantic understatement.
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