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Vanguard of the Crusade: The US 101st Airborne Division in WWII

Vanguard of the Crusade: The US 101st Airborne Division in WWII

List Price: $29.95
Your Price: $29.95
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: They, who fought, speak
Review: "Vanguard of the Crusade" is a spare, straightforward account
of what it was like to leap into the darkness from a hurtling
C-47 on June 6, 1944 and descend into the grinding teeth of
Western Europe's second inferno of the twentieth century.

The author tells the stories of Normandy, Market-Garden, the
Ruhr battles and the last days of the war through the voices
of the men of the 101st Airborne Division who lived them and
fought them. In Mark Bando, the World War II Screaming Eagles
have found a chronicler whose thorough research and respect for
the facts does full justice to their courage and sacrifice for
their country. His stanards and care for accuracy are of the
highest.

The book stays largely at ground level as the exploits and
fierceness of individual troopers are given voice in their own
words and those of their comrades. The roads, farms, towns
and watercourses among which the 101st paratroopers battled
Wehrmacht, Waffen-SS and other German units are surveyed
with the aid of maps and photographs taken during the
invasion.

As might be expected of a story told almost entirely in the
voices of front-line soldiers, "Vanguard of the Crusade"
readers will find it unrelenting in its descriptions of
combat and how men become when death is close at hand, both
to be feared and to be given to the enemy. To be sure, the
book is also leavened with amusing anecdotes and the
ornery, irreverent spirit of life which bound the troopers
of the 101st to each other and sustained them. These two
themes of death and life intertwine from beginning to end,
in a book which gives the necessary editorial and background
information and then stands back, allowing the men who faced
battle and prevailed to speak for themselves.

"Vanguard of the Crusade" is more than worthy to stand alongside
any of the numerous best-selling accounts of D-Day and the
American World War II campaigns in Europe which have appeared
in recent years.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: THE book on the 101st to read.
Review: Forget the rest. If you want to know the true story of the 101st in WW2 this is THE author to read. No one knows more about the unit that Bando. He is THE 101st Airborne Division historian. Period.

He puts many mis-understandings to bed, and provides the most accurate look at this division. Some great rare photos as well.

Well worth the money.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Rolls Royce of US Army Airborne Books
Review: Had there been a Nobel Prize for military history books Mark Bando's Vanguard of the Crusade would be nominated...and ought to win. It is crystal clear to me that the research behind this book is close to a life-time of hard work (I am an author myself). The text is stunning both in content and style. And the number of not only unpublished but also amazing photographs is awesome. In contrast to many other divisional histories you'll also learn from this book about the enemies that the division fought - in great detail. If ever there was and will be an absolute must book for US Army airborne veterans, family and buffs - this is it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The ultimate airborne historical account
Review: If you are a serious airborne historian or a more casual but interested reader of WW2 history and accounts,this book is an essential addition to your library.

Bando is the ultimate 101st airborne historian and a book of this quality could only be produced as a result of the years of painstaking research and interviews with over 900 veterans which the author has undertaken for over 30 years.

If you are new to airborne history,I believe it should be your first purchase if you are serious about knowing what really happened.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Premier individual and small unit action history.
Review: Mark Bando has done it again. His accounts of individual and small unit action during WW2 is outstanding. His attention to detail, and respect for the WW2 veteran, is vividly apparent. I had the pleasure of meeting Mr. Bando during the debut of his book, 2nd Armored Division in the Land of the Dead, at a 2nd Armored reunion. I met some of the men involved in the actions he recounted, and they confirm his in depth research. I am sure the same devotion goes into every one of his books, and I cannot overstate how informative, and enjoyable, these books are for the WW2 history buff.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Premier individual and small unit action history.
Review: Mark Bando has done it again. His accounts of individual and small unit action during WW2 is outstanding. His attention to detail, and respect for the WW2 veteran, is vividly apparent. I had the pleasure of meeting Mr. Bando during the debut of his book, 2nd Armored Division in the Land of the Dead, at a 2nd Armored reunion. I met some of the men involved in the actions he recounted, and they confirm his in depth research. I am sure the same devotion goes into every one of his books, and I cannot overstate how informative, and enjoyable, these books are for the WW2 history buff.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the best on the 101st Airborne!
Review: Mark Bando's latest book "Vanguard of the Crusade" is a must for the Airborne collector and/or historian. If you are looking for pictures, this ones got them! Over 450 pictures and maps. The maps do a great job of detailing the area's of operations with out being too busy to make sense of.

It is the first book that does a great job of explaining when, where, how and whom did what. It also has interesting little side stories that were related to the author himself by the the troopers who were there!

The back of the book has a nice section on Airborne uniforms and equipment as well as a section that highlights the German units that opposed the division throughout it's campaign in Europe.

It is an excellent read, jam-packed with informative insight and would make an excellent purchase for the "Band of Brothers" enthusiasts to the collector and historian alike.

DON'T MISS THIS ONE!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A masterpiece - again!
Review: This is a true masterpiece. never before has so much knowledge been shared with all of us who wasn't there.
If you liked Band of Brothers do not hesitated: Get this book and read the whole (true) story about one of the toughest fighting units of WWII.
They deserve it!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: THE Encyclopedia of the 101st. Airborne Division in WWII
Review: Vanguard is the most comprehensively researched work between two covers of the Screaming Eagles in WWII, from (A)ddeville to (Z)ell am See. It's the perfect mix between a scholarly presentation of the facts, and human interest war stories as told through the words of the men who were in the "dress rehearsal" for the Hollywood productions. Bando is not a cheerleader, so don't expect a spin on the facts. He's a retired policeman, an investigator/researcher and a reporter of events. He often leaves the answers to questions of right or wrong to the reader. You get the report of what happened as seen through the eyes of the men who pulled the triggers and lived through experiences that many of them still think about daily.

Bando's decades of personal interviews and research have become his trademark. There are no research assistants or hastily pumped out books to coincide with the anniversary of a well-known invasion or battle. When he writes something that isn't attributed to another author, you can be sure that it was the result of 40 years of personal research that included and continues to include traveling the country speaking to individual veterans, attending everything from company to division reunions, and regular trips to the National Archives and the battlefields of Europe, whether he's armed with a notebook, camera or metal detector. I'm never surprised when I read a quality book by another author (Richard Killblane and Jake McNiece's "Filthy Thirteen" for instance) and see Bando's name in the footnotes or bibliography.

"Vanguard" turns the spotlight over to the guys who weren't portrayed by Hollywood's A list in the movies. Men like Lt. William Russo, who could do with an 81mm mortar what a sniper could do with a scoped rifle, only to much more dramatic effect on the hapless target.

I wish I had the time to go through "Vanguard" like Manny, with my maps out, especially the ones published with Bando's 2-part article in "Armchair General" magazine, but the anecdotes on virtually every page of the book are enough to keep me turning the pages. They're stories you haven't heard before, whether the story is humorous such as when Jack Womer of "Filthy Thirteen" fame speaks of Winston Churchill urinating on his boots while he hid in a hay pile after a practice jump, or riveting like the story of one-man army Charles Santarsiero, or Joe Beyrle, who spent more combat time with a Russian armor unit after multiple escapes from German POW camps than he did with US troops. Vanguard also answers the question: "Can one paratrooper shoot 3 SS men with one round from his M-1?" The answer, of course, is "yes", and Leo Gillis did it.

If you like history more than Hollywood, and want the most accurate information available on the 101st. ABD in WWII, buy this book. Better yet, buy this one together with "101st Airborne: The Screaming Eagles at Normandy". Some authors dedicate their careers to what they know, and others to what they can sell quickly. This author knows what he's talking about.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Brothers in Arms, Men of Courage and Integrity, and Vanguard
Review: Vanguard of the Crusade: The 101st Airborne Division in World War II by Mark Bando is a truly special chronicle of the 101st Airborne from its time in wait in England prior to the invasion of the Continent to the end of the war and disbanding of the Division. Vanguard stands as a tribute to those who fought with the Screaming Eagles, whether they survived the war or not.

Bando has sculpted his prose from hundreds of interviews and personal diaries (although expressly forbade in combat zones!) of 101st veterans. With often only snippets of information from any single source, Bando has been able to piece together an engaging history of combat of one of the most elite forces the Allies assembled during the Second World War. Where possible Bando has reproduced the words of the veterans verbatim within the context of larger discussions lending a feel of authenticity that many other works do not achieve. Vanguard is not written in the flowery novelette style of so many authors (e.g., Ambrose) and as such may be a "difficult" read for many less interested in historical events minus the Hollywood feel. Yet, having said that, anyone interested in how the 101st earned its reputation should not be deterred from tackling this book. It's a wonderful collection of memories and writings that is weaved into a nearly seamless single story of the Division from England 1943 to late 45 in occupied Germany. If you want HISTORY - untainted and without opinions based on hindsight of 60 years - this is it. Bando and the Editorial staff at Aberjona Press have done an incredible job checking, re-checking and verifying information and this fact alone makes this a wonderful piece of historical writing. One other subtle yet VERY effective editorial trick has been to italicize German unit names. In this way it is always clear who is who without knowing all units by heart.

Vanguard of the Crusade represents an indispensable source of fuller information that has not been pre-digested for those less patient for the complete story. Two obvious examples come to mind: First, many probably think they know the "story" of the Airborne drop in the Netherlands as part of Operation Market-Garden. However, the story told in the classic (and both well written and factually sound) A Bridge Too Far by Cornelius Ryan is quite "sanitized" and abridged with respect to the actions in which the 101st were involved. Bando does a wonderful job touching on the breadth of the combat situations in which the Screaming Eagles were involved while trying to keep Hell's Highway open. It is probably fair to assume that many people assume that the 101st fought as a single group in relatively small engagement areas during Market-Garden but Bando's text makes it clear that the reality was that of smaller groups spread over greater distances engaged in multiple hit-and-run (generally) battles with both first and second-rate German troops. Few sources (one exception being It Never Snows In September by Robert Kershaw) make this clear. Second, although the Battle of the Bulge is certainly one of the most recognized military actions of the US armed forces, and many know that the 101st Airborne Division played a crucial role, it is unlikely that many understand what the siege on Bastogne really represented in terms of combat. Contrary to "popular" depictions, the month long fierce battles around town of Bastogne were not simply one battle a la the Alamo. Certainly Bastogne was surrounded by the Germans and siege set, but many small Belgian towns like Foy, Bizory, Marvie, Longvilly, and Noville that were situated around Bastogne played a role in its defense and ultimate reversal of battle. It is important to remember not just those who fought from within Bastogne proper, but also those who battled from a distance of yards to a few miles outside Bastogne itself. It was this collective group that earned the Distinguished Unit Citation en masse for their key role in the Battle of the Bulge. Bando dedicates a large portion of his text to these lesser known but not lesser important engagements.

I found Vanguard of the Crusade to be an extremely pleasurable read. I would sit with maps of the various engagements (all the maps presented in the book can be downloaded and printed from: http://aegis-consulting.com/index.html), plot the actions while I moved through the text, and get lost in the hundreds of photographs presented that put a real face on the map coordinates and words. While it is not essential to read Vanguard in this fashion I suggest it, as it is rare that one can so lose oneself so fully in a popular historical text. I give Vanguard a hearty 5 stars for context, presentation and soul!


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