Picture of author.
30 Works 1,088 Members 6 Reviews

About the Author

Hugh McManners was born in Oxford, England, brought up in Australia, and educated at the Royal Military Academy at Sandhurst and Oxford University. During 18 years in the British Army, with 148 Commando Forward Observation Battery, he was a commando, paratrooper, and an army diving supervisor, and show more ran the British Army's jungle warfare training school in Belize. During the Falklands War, he fought with the Special Boat Squadron and worked with the SAS. Hugh has also served in the Ministry of Defense in London, at Fort Ord, California, with the US Army's "Light Fighters," on counter terrorist duties in Northern Ireland, and with the United Nations. Hugh then became an author, television documentary producer, and broadcaster, and for five years was the Defense Correspondent of the London Sunday Times show less
Image credit: From the cover of Falklands Commando

Series

Works by Hugh McManners

Backpacker's Handbook (1994) 125 copies
Outdoor Adventure Handbook (1996) 77 copies
Ultimate Special Forces (2003) 70 copies, 1 review
Falklands Commando (1984) 37 copies
The Scars of War (1993) 33 copies, 2 reviews

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

I learned some brilliantly simple tactics just from my first few minutes of skimming this book. Despite its relatively brief length, it is crammed with survival techniques. For example, just attach a small, fluffy feather and a rose hip (as a floater) to fishing line for an instant lure. As with all DK books, this one delivers. Too bad it's on the short side.
 
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YESterNOw | 1 other review | Jan 8, 2018 |
Absolutely excellent book on the effects of war on individual soldiers. Authoritative and convincing.
 
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jolyonpatten | 1 other review | Feb 1, 2016 |
I purchased this to add to my box of emergency supplies. While it contains useful information, over all, this is not helpful. It assumes too much prior knowledge on the mechanics of survival - like how to actually use a knife or tie knots. The bit about edible versus inedible plants was useless. There wasn't enough information to actually determine what one could or couldn't eat. The illustrations and such were good, but they often skipped steps or assumed the reader already knew how to get from A to B. I will still add this book to the box, but I will need to purchase something else to be supplement as this one is not going as helpful as I wanted.… (more)
 
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empress8411 | 1 other review | Apr 29, 2014 |
The "oral history" approach works well here. The first Gulf War has always been a tricky war to make sense of from the perspective of the average UK voter. This comprehensive collection of tales from soldiers and officers and politicians gives an intimate and immediate impression of the reality for those British people who fought the war, or who were politically advocating it.

Oral histories work very well as a medium for writing about war. They remind you that war is chaotic, that it draws hundreds of thousands of people into its maw, and that there will never be any single authoritative history on something so complex. This is particularly true of the Gulf War, which was politically ambiguous and poorly reported, being the first modern "media-managed" conflict.

Good stuff. An essential companion to any straightforward historical account. More than once have I read something elsewhere, perhaps a sweeping statement from a former cabinet minister or a confident proclamation from a general, and then been able to reflect that it couldn't possibly be quite true - purely having read this.
… (more)
 
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Quickpint | Dec 20, 2012 |

Awards

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Statistics

Works
30
Members
1,088
Popularity
#23,609
Rating
½ 3.5
Reviews
6
ISBNs
93
Languages
14

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