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Other blogs:

RSS Inside GMT

  • Foxes and Lions (Part 3): Military Matters, Captains, and Condottieri June 12, 2026

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  • Playing at the World 2E V2 Arrives May 5, 2025

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  • [Crossing the Moro CG] T=0902 -- Rough start July 18, 2015
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RSS Orbs and Balrogs

  • Bretwalda - Daggers of Oxenaforda pt.4 - Fallen King May 27, 2017

Miracle at Philadelphia

by Rindis on May 29, 2021 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

Bowen’s history of the Constitutional Convention is a great read, and makes what at the time would have been endless debates nicely accessible. It breaks into two nearly even parts, where the first is a fairly chronological account of the first half, and the second instead goes topic-by-topic for the second half.

This was deliberate, and Bowen uses the adjournment of the Convention at the end of July as an opportunity to take a look at the overall condition of the states, and then picks up the by-topic narrative after reconvening on August 6. It makes for an interesting structure, and one that works out well, though I found myself enjoying the first half more (which shows my low tolerance for going into the nitty-gritty).

Naturally, there is also plenty of scene-setting, with the crises besetting the government under the Articles of Confederation leading to a convention to amend the Articles to make the new government less unwieldy and incapable. A whole new constitution was not part of the original program, but speedily became its object once in session. At the end, Bowen naturally also goes into the process of ratification, and the political fighting in the various states over the new Constitution. This part is a bit of a whirlwind in comparison, but still takes up three chapters.

This is very much a readable history, and quite good at its job. Bowen doesn’t try for any real ‘re-interpretations’, but works with the exiting materials, and references to the notes and letters around the Convention, and spends a lot of effort to set the scene and get the atmosphere down. Instead long analyses of arguments pro and con, there is reference to the weather, to the physical world around the delegates from the states, to help understand the conditions they were working in. It does a great job as a look into the place and time, and leaves the hair-splitting to much dryer reads.

└ Tags: books, history, reading, review
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Roman Centurions 31 BC-AD 500

by Rindis on May 21, 2021 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

The second volume of Osprey’s survey of Roman Centurions is a bit better than the first. Most likely, there’s just more source material to draw from. There is less of the individual career profiles, so if you thought that was a nice touch, you’ll miss it here. However, I’m sure those were just there to provide examples when the evidence was otherwise sparse, so the lack here only points up the overall better knowledge of the period.

The art and photographs continue to live up Osprey standards, though with only three full pieces this time. The photography concentrates more on depictions of particular gear, instead of needing to find anyone who was a centurion at all, again pointing up the better sources for the period.

There is a very good outline of centurion positions inside a legion, and the gradings between them. Things get less certain for detached appointments (assigned to non-legionary units, on a governors staff, etc), but there’s good discussion there too. The selection of centurions is also gone into, along with other general details. The last section is the typical (for Osprey) dive into equipment. Naturally, there’s a lot go over, which is done at Osprey’s usual level of detail, so it’s quite long.

Overall, this is a notably better book than the first one, mostly because everything said is much less nebulous and uncertain. I have a feeling that it gives a greater impression of stability than is deserved, but that comes down to the nature of the sources again.

└ Tags: books, history, reading, review, Rome
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Aetius: Attila’s Nemesis

by Rindis on May 13, 2021 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

Ian Hughes’ books on the period where the Western Empire dissolved into nothingness have been very good at providing a clearer picture of the process. I think this volume might be the best one of the lot.

Like his earlier book on Stilicho, this traces the career of one man, who many with the barest of knowledge of the period will know of because of his commanding the Roman side at the Battle of the Catalaunian Plains against Attila the Hun.

The early section looks at Aetius’ early life, and positions him as part of the Roman upper class. He was traded to the Huns as a ‘hostage’ during his teenage years; Hughes is at pains to talk about the actual nature of hostages as political insurance in the pre-modern world, something that needs looking at more often. At any rate, this part informs a large part of his thesis. The Roman military had become very conservative with manpower and emphasized sieges and the like to set-piece battles. The Huns and other tribal confederations still emphasized combat and set-piece battles of various sizes, and Aetius’ career shows the same pattern, so Hughes assumes that much of his military training and style comes from his period with the Huns.

Aetius also relies on support from Hunnic factions, particularly early in his career. Hughes also figures this comes from friendships formed in his time with them. This is important during some early maneuverings, which could easily have ended up with Aetius dead as a rebel, but after stong-arming the other faction, ended with him working quite effectively inside and with the system for the next two decades.

It can reasonably be said that his use of Hunnic troops during his internal fight against Boniface was part of the downfall of the Western Empire. Hughes doesn’t go too much into that, but does spend a good amount of time and thought on various settlements of barbarians inside the empire. This too he sees as not necessarily destructive of the Empire as it had successfully been done before. In his concluding part though, he talks about the various methods by which this was done, and points out that the Goths in southern Gaul had been allowed to settle with their leadership intact, instead of it being sent elsewhere, generally as leadership in a different section of the army. This put people used to politics and power with a built-in power base inside the Empire, and that is what Hughes points to as the dramatic step towards the dissolution of the western Empire.

Often what is known of Aetius comes straight out of Gregory of Tours, and Hughes does a good job here pulling together the sources, and giving the outline of his character. I think Hughes may have trended towards being too sympathetic to him, but his conclusions are reasonable.

└ Tags: books, history, reading, review, Rome
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Twisting the Rope

by Rindis on May 5, 2021 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

Tea With the Black Dragon had crime/mystery as part of its central thread, and in this sequel, it’s basically the main plot in classic ’80s fashion, with a murder, no clear sense of who could have done it, plenty of police involvement as the main characters try to figure out the whodunnit, and a long confession of past misdeeds as part of the end.

Like the first book, there’s some fantasy here in an undercurrent, and it does have plot ramifications, but is never focused on. In fact, if you know nothing of the first book, you’ll probably spend a long time waiting for a reveal on Mayland Long that will never happen here.

Instead of Silicon Valley, this is more of a period (now) piece on the music scene as the action revolves around a small band as part of the Celtic revival of the ’80s that is finishing up a tour. Martha has pulled the group together, Mayland is acting as manager, and tempers are frayed at the end of a long trip.

The worst thing is that the Open Road Media version of the text for the book is in horrible shape, and obviously hasn’t had anyone go through it at all for clean up, as problems crop up from the very beginning, including Long’s name not being capitalized at one  point. (Interestingly, about 2/3s through is in better shape than the start, and it gets worse again towards the end.)

└ Tags: books, contemporary fantasy, reading, review
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The Golden Naginata

by Rindis on April 27, 2021 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

The second Tomoe Goezen book is in the same format as the first: Four nearly independent novellas under one cover, with no more than scene breaks within them. Like last time, they are different stories, with different tones, but there is an overall arc that ties the four together.

The episodic nature is made a bit more pronounced here by many (but not all) of the secondary characters from the first volume being absent here. Japanese myth is still ever-present in this world, and continues to be an important way of how the world and story works. This time we also have the Gempei War, or at least a good susbititute, and that forms the arc that ties the book together, as she ends up married to the ambitious Lord Kiso (Minamoto no Yoshinaka) in the first part, and his attempt to set up his own Shogunate is the background to the second part and the focus of the third.

Tomoe is much more distant as a character in this book, which certainly drags it down some, as well as the fact that there’s large chunks where she is more acted upon than acting. A problem particular to my Kindle edition, is that the publisher put an ad for themselves right after the third and final part… which can easily obscure that there is an epilogue after that which is nearly as extensive as the main three parts.

└ Tags: books, fantasy, reading, review
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