I have mentioned a book project quite often recently, most of you are probably wondering what the hell I am on about, so I figured I would more or less let the cat out of the bag and see what reaction it gets.
Iron Crosses have been covered in a number of books, the most neglected related field being the award documents, especially those from the first world war.
Even if you dont really collect those, üplease read to the end as I hope to do something of interest to YOU as well.
Some time ago I started kicking the idea around about doing a book on WW1 EK docs, but with the intention of making it not only a book that would be of interest to those of that collect these, but also a book that would be of interest to medal collectors, both of iron crosses and regular imperial awards.
Actually, I hope to stretch the borders even further, as I am hoping that the finished product will cover topics that will be of interest to most people with an interest in the big war, not only from the German side, but also from the allied side.
How is this supposed to work, Afterall it is a militaria book not a history book...
Most militaria books cover objects, Formans books being a prime example. Few books dig into the story behind the object, and that my friends, is the goal I am setting for this book.
Personnaly I find Hammelmans book on WW1 Iron Cross certificates to be the best document book availible so far. It is of course seriously lacking in print quality and the texts are mostly limited to brief descriptions of where the units fought, but it is still a leap forward from the Formans "price guide with measurements" format.
I thought the Hammelman book was the place to start, however at that point my imagination began to run wild.
Some of you (should be all of you) have read Scotts article about the Metz44 cufftittle. It is kick ass good. It not only pictures the tittle, but once you have read the article you "know" something about the award, the men who wore it and what happened there in 1944.
So... how does that relate to the book project..
Quite simple, most of us have iron crosses, most of us know they were probably awarded for bravery, most of us are able to say,, this document was awarded to a guy who was in the Infantry/artillery/signals fighting at Verdun/On the Somme/In the Argonne/on the aisne.
The object of this book is to put some meat on the bones. When it is finished it should give the collector, surrounded by his collection not only a nice photo book, but a book with "content" a book that will tell him where when and how the medals were earned.
The focus will be broad and cover many fields, heavy in subjects that can only be found in period German books.
A few ideas of subjects being covered or already covered.
We have a few chapters on individual soldiers and their careers, we have chapters about specific battles, sometimes with a broad outline of a battle, sometimes with details down to the combat of the specific company of the man in question.
done or being done are chapters on fighting in sectors where little information is availible in run of the mill histories, for instance, Hartmannsweilerkopf, Deadman, Hill 304, Priesterwald etc.
Chapters to specific branches of service, one dealing with machine gun units and tactics, a chapter dealing with signals, hearing posts and frontline communications, a chapter on the complicated artillery tactics used by the Germans in the Kaiserschlacht.
Some subjects, hopefully also interesting, are already planned like the developement of the German defensive battle tactics, the effects of submarine warfare on the fighting on the western front.
Ambitious? Yes. Complicated? not really. The intention is not to cover every facet or to do a concise history of the war. The final product will be an ecclectic collection of texts that, taken as a whole, should give a good overview of who the men were who won the crosses we collect, what they went through, how and where they fought and what sacrifices they made to win their crosses.
The word chapters is used very loosely, they can vary from half a page to five pages or more with a probable ratio of one text page to one illustration page. Each chapter will have one or more docs that are directly related to the text.
The finished book will contain around 300 or more documents and will run about 600 pages. So far there is a publisher, I will keep his name under cover for the time being as I dont want to put any pressure on him or put him under any obligation.
I have been working on this for some time, about 60 chapters are done, some with single docs some with 2 or 3 docs. David Gregory joined the team sometime ago and a few members of this forum and the 14-18 forum have expressed an interest in doing a bit of writing within their fields of interest (fields of interests including the somme, Flanders, Verdun etc.)
Anyway, I thought I would officially come out of the closet with the idea, give you the plot in a nutshell and give you (coming soon) a few examples of what I am talking abot.
There is still a long way to go, a lot of work to do...
If anyone has any ideas, comments, thoughts, wishes etc tec. please let me know
I will post a few example soon.
Iron Crosses have been covered in a number of books, the most neglected related field being the award documents, especially those from the first world war.
Even if you dont really collect those, üplease read to the end as I hope to do something of interest to YOU as well.
Some time ago I started kicking the idea around about doing a book on WW1 EK docs, but with the intention of making it not only a book that would be of interest to those of that collect these, but also a book that would be of interest to medal collectors, both of iron crosses and regular imperial awards.
Actually, I hope to stretch the borders even further, as I am hoping that the finished product will cover topics that will be of interest to most people with an interest in the big war, not only from the German side, but also from the allied side.
How is this supposed to work, Afterall it is a militaria book not a history book...
Most militaria books cover objects, Formans books being a prime example. Few books dig into the story behind the object, and that my friends, is the goal I am setting for this book.
Personnaly I find Hammelmans book on WW1 Iron Cross certificates to be the best document book availible so far. It is of course seriously lacking in print quality and the texts are mostly limited to brief descriptions of where the units fought, but it is still a leap forward from the Formans "price guide with measurements" format.
I thought the Hammelman book was the place to start, however at that point my imagination began to run wild.
Some of you (should be all of you) have read Scotts article about the Metz44 cufftittle. It is kick ass good. It not only pictures the tittle, but once you have read the article you "know" something about the award, the men who wore it and what happened there in 1944.
So... how does that relate to the book project..
Quite simple, most of us have iron crosses, most of us know they were probably awarded for bravery, most of us are able to say,, this document was awarded to a guy who was in the Infantry/artillery/signals fighting at Verdun/On the Somme/In the Argonne/on the aisne.
The object of this book is to put some meat on the bones. When it is finished it should give the collector, surrounded by his collection not only a nice photo book, but a book with "content" a book that will tell him where when and how the medals were earned.
The focus will be broad and cover many fields, heavy in subjects that can only be found in period German books.
A few ideas of subjects being covered or already covered.
We have a few chapters on individual soldiers and their careers, we have chapters about specific battles, sometimes with a broad outline of a battle, sometimes with details down to the combat of the specific company of the man in question.
done or being done are chapters on fighting in sectors where little information is availible in run of the mill histories, for instance, Hartmannsweilerkopf, Deadman, Hill 304, Priesterwald etc.
Chapters to specific branches of service, one dealing with machine gun units and tactics, a chapter dealing with signals, hearing posts and frontline communications, a chapter on the complicated artillery tactics used by the Germans in the Kaiserschlacht.
Some subjects, hopefully also interesting, are already planned like the developement of the German defensive battle tactics, the effects of submarine warfare on the fighting on the western front.
Ambitious? Yes. Complicated? not really. The intention is not to cover every facet or to do a concise history of the war. The final product will be an ecclectic collection of texts that, taken as a whole, should give a good overview of who the men were who won the crosses we collect, what they went through, how and where they fought and what sacrifices they made to win their crosses.
The word chapters is used very loosely, they can vary from half a page to five pages or more with a probable ratio of one text page to one illustration page. Each chapter will have one or more docs that are directly related to the text.
The finished book will contain around 300 or more documents and will run about 600 pages. So far there is a publisher, I will keep his name under cover for the time being as I dont want to put any pressure on him or put him under any obligation.
I have been working on this for some time, about 60 chapters are done, some with single docs some with 2 or 3 docs. David Gregory joined the team sometime ago and a few members of this forum and the 14-18 forum have expressed an interest in doing a bit of writing within their fields of interest (fields of interests including the somme, Flanders, Verdun etc.)
Anyway, I thought I would officially come out of the closet with the idea, give you the plot in a nutshell and give you (coming soon) a few examples of what I am talking abot.
There is still a long way to go, a lot of work to do...
If anyone has any ideas, comments, thoughts, wishes etc tec. please let me know
I will post a few example soon.
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