










/Steve+300[1].jpg)
Steven Pressfield, Author
of "Killing Rommel" |
“Killing Rommel”/Killing+Rommel+(2).jpg)
Steven Pressfield
Doubleday, 2008, U.S. $ 24.95
ISBN #
978-0-385-51970-0
Reviewer : Andrew Lubin
In
“Killing Rommel” veteran author Steven Pressfield has
written yet another vivid and exciting novel detailing the
matter-of-fact heroics and actions by the warriors who fight
and too-often die.
Set in
North Africa during the British fight against Gen Erwin
Rommel in 1942, Pressfield takes the exploits of the British
Army’s little-known Long Range Desert Group, and presents
the reader with yet another well-researched and exciting
story of men at war.
As is
Pressfield’s style, he tells the story from the viewpoint of
one of the participants. Lt. Lawrence Chapman is one of
Pressfield’s proverbial citizen-soldiers, a young man thrust
into a war for which his middle-class collegiate upbringing
has not at all prepared him. While normally in Pressfield’s
books it’s the enlisted men who are the narrators and
telling the story from the boots-on-the-ground perspective,
it’s a unique change in approach as Lt. Chapman brings an
officer’s point of view to the fight.
The war
in 1942 in North Africa was going badly for the Allies. Gen
Rommel’s strategy and tactics overwhelmed Gen Montgomery’s
British troops, and the initial American Army reinforcements
were routed at the Kasserine Pass. If Rommel could
successfully capture Cairo, then the Germans would control
the middle-eastern oil fields, the Suez Canal, and quick
access to India and the Pacific, all of which would have
horrific repercussions on the Allied war effort.
In a
desperate response, the British formed the Long Range Desert
Group in an attempt to kill Rommel, and Pressfield uses Lt.
Chapman to narrate the war in the desert.
Historically accurate, “Killing Rommel” describes a war that
most in Americans might only know through the old television
show “Rat Patrol.” Driving old Chevrolet trucks that they
up-armor themselves, often short on petrol, rations, water,
and ammunition, Lt Chapman depicts the fight in North Africa
between the beleaguered Brits and Rommel’s Afrika Corps as
he learns to command as he learns to fight.
Those
who have fought, and especially those Marines and Soldiers
who have fought at An-Nasiriyah, Fallujah, Haditha, Anbar
Province, and the Diyala River Valley, will understand the
pictures Pressfield paints of the thirst, heat, sand, and
boredom – interrupted by intense combat – in the desert. He
draws the reader into the action with Chapman and his men as
they drive –often by stars and dead reckoning – to their
rendezvous points and missions.
As
Pressfield’s books are so famously noted, the characters in
“Killing Rommel” possess a quiet courage and grow into a
maturity far beyond their years. Similar to Xeo in “Gates of
Fire,” and Matthais in “The Afghan Campaign,” the deep story
here is how Chapman and his fellow Tommies are thrown into
some extraordinarily ugly situations, and then respond.
It’s the story of these citizen-soldiers and how they react
to the carnage around them that makes “Killing Rommel” one
of Pressfield’s best books.
|