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Seven Stars: The Okinawa Battle Diaries of Simon Bolivar Buckner, JR., and Joseph Stilwell
 
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Seven Stars: The Okinawa Battle Diaries of Simon Bolivar Buckner, JR., and Joseph Stilwell (Hardcover)

by Simon Bolivar Buckner (Author), Nicholas Evan Sarantakes (Editor)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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"The morning was uneventful, except for a visit from Gen. Bruce (77th Div) and Rear Adm. Kliand who is taking him to his objective. Bruce, as usual, is rarin' to go and is looking well ahead for action. I much prefer a bird dog that you have to whistle in to one that you have to urge out. He is of the former variety." - Lt. Gen. Simon Bolivar Buckner, Jr., March 20, 1944; "Buckner is tiresome. I tried to tell him what I had seen, but he knew it all. Keeps repeating his wisecracks. 'The Lord said let there be mud,' etc. etc." - Gen. Joseph Stilwell, June 5, 1944"


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Battle diaries are essential for understanding what generals are thinking as they work their way through the fog of battle. Nicholas Evan Sarantakes juxtaposes the diaries of two very different generals who both fought at Okinawa: Lieutenant General Buckner, a by-the-numbers man who favored the use of artillery and tanks to reduce entrenched positions, and General Stilwell, a prickly outsider who preferred maneuver to set-piece battles. Sarantakes identifies individuals, includes explanations of important events alluded to by the generals, and provides glossaries of main characters and military terms. The result is a record of how Buckner and Stilwell came to grips with the problems of command on a wartorn island at the end of a long logistical tether. With the background information provided by Sarantakes, the diaries of these men become accessible to the reader. Buckner is the more restrained, a Southern gentleman whose career was average and whose diary entries are interspersed with letters to his wife. He shuttles between forward command posts and shipboard conferences, noting how much rain has fallen, how many enemy have been killed, and how many aircraft shot down. Stilwell is a self-styled outsider, a brilliant warrior with the social graces of a porcupine. He dislikes Buckner and has little patience for his irreverent humor. Stilwell's entries are peppered with frank and often acrid observations about everything and everybody. He dismisses the British as "hoggish, inconsiderate" Limeys and atomic scientists as "temperamental bugs." The battle for Okinawa was a pivotal event in World War II and has the distinction of being the single bloodiest conflict in the history of the United States Navy. This book is an in-depth exploration of the art of leading troops in such a battle.

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5.0 out of 5 stars A welcome addition to military reference shelves, Jun 8 2004
By Midwest Book Review (Oregon, WI USA) - See all my reviews
Seven Stars collects the battle diaries of two starkly different generals from the World War II battles fought at Okinawa. Lieutenant General Buckner was a straight laced, clockwork-precision type who preferred to use artillery and tanks to reduce entrenched positions, while General Stilwell was a short-tempered outsider who disdained set-piece battles in favor of maneuver. In addition to presenting disparate views of history in each man's own words, editor Nicholas Sarantakes offers informed and informative explanations of crucial events referred to in the battle diaries, as well as glossaries of main characters and military terms. A welcome addition to military reference shelves and primary reference sources of the Pacific battles of World War II, and utterly involving for scholars of military science and lay readers alike, Seven Stars is very highly recommended reading for students of 20th Century Military History.
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