Imatge de l'autor

Daniel Allen Butler

Autor/a de Unsinkable: The Full Story of RMS Titanic

13 obres 666 Membres 21 Ressenyes

Sobre l'autor

Daniel Allen Butler, a maritime and military historian, is the bestselling author of "Unsinkable": The Full Story of RMS Titanic, Distant Victory: The Battle of Jutland and the Allied Triumph in the First World War, and Field Marshal: The Life and Death of Erwin Rommel. He is an internationally mostra'n més recognized authority on military and maritime subjects. mostra'n menys

Inclou el nom: Daniel A. Butler

Obres de Daniel Allen Butler

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Nom oficial
Butler, David Allen
Data de naixement
1957-01-24
Gènere
male
Nacionalitat
USA
Lloc de naixement
Lapeer, Michigan
Llocs de residència
Lapeer, Michigan, USA
Educació
Hope College, Holland, Michigan
Grand Valley State University
University of Erlangen
Biografia breu
Butler spent eight years in the United States Army, six of them as an intelligence analyst. During his military service he began laying the foundation for a career as a military and maritime historian by taking every opportunity to do research into a wide range of subjects.

Membres

Ressenyes

This was a biography of the "desert fox." It was very complimentary and I'm not sure it's deserved as I don't know enough to make more commentary. This author asserts that Rommel was the ultimate soldier/warrior/German. He was not a member of the Nazi party and did not ascribe to their racial stance. (He has 3 or 4 footnotes with references for this point, but I can not access any of them. I can verify through reliable sources that he was not a member of the Nazi party). That being said, Rommel was a mentor in the Hitler youth at age 16 and also became Hitler's bodyguard in Poland where he came to the Fuhrer's attention. The author claims Rommel was loyal to Hitler because he thought him a good commander. He was loyal until D-Day, when he discovered there was no way that Germany could win the war; they had squandered their manpower and resources on the SS and the camps. Butler claims Rommel was forced to commit suicide not because of his participation in the July 20 plot (which the author says he was not involved in), but because he dared to tell Hitler that one can not divide the resources of a country; he dared to criticize Hitler. I get the feeling that this author wanted to make Rommel into a shining knight, which he wasn't. This was a very good read, even if tedious in some places and with a lot of duplication. 798 pages… (més)
 
Marcat
Tess_W | Aug 17, 2023 |
I have always been interested in the Titanic disaster and have read extensively about it. This book is another in my quest to puzzle out what happened, how, and why. It is non-fiction about the rescue effort and aftermath of the night the Titanic hit an iceberg and sank. It focuses on the ships that responded (or did not), the rescue of the passengers, and both the American and British inquiries in the aftermath. Butler does not recount the timeline of events on the Titanic itself. There are many other books that cover this information in detail. My favorite is A Night to Remember by Walter Lord, which I highly recommend. Butler instead tackles the calls for assistance, the actions of the responding ships, and the rescue efforts. I was interested to read it as I have always wondered why the Californian, the closest, did not come to the aid of the Titanic. How can a ship’s officers see a distress signal and ignore it?

This book is well-structured. It starts with a short history of maritime travel between Europe and America, the development of wireless communications, and the background of the Carpathia and Californian. It then moves into the experience and temperament of the primary players. The author pays specific attention to the captains of the Carpathia and Californian, Arthur Rostron and Stanley Lord, and their contrasting styles of leadership. Butler’s analysis is clear and logical. He expresses strong opinions and does so articulately. Even when not agreeing completely, I could follow his train of thought. I wish he had included footnotes along the way rather than a solely a list of sources and bibliography at the end.

After reading this book, I feel I have gotten a good sense of what the record shows regarding the action or inaction at the time of the emergency. Some will rise to the occasion and address the challenge while others will do nothing and deny responsibility. It is impossible, of course, to get one hundred percent clarity with an event this long in the past, and with conflicting memories of witnesses, but when reading many sources, the big picture eventually emerges. I feel like Butler has added valuable insights and has provided a plausible answer to my question. Of course, it won’t be the last book I read about the Titanic.

Recommended to those interested in maritime history and, of course, those specifically interested in the Titanic.
… (més)
 
Marcat
Castlelass | Hi ha 6 ressenyes més | Oct 30, 2022 |
When the author isn't busy exposing his ignorance about Islam and sticks to a straightforward retelling of events that occurred in Khartoum and the surrounding area, this book isn't terrible. But unfortunately, he was very busy doing the former, and for that reason I have to question the scholarship of this book. The whole venture is spoiled because, in addition to a distractingly hostile tone, he gets so much so wrong. If he can't be bothered to fact check basic information about Islam, why should I think he made an effort to be fastidious about details about the so-called Mahdi and his confrontation with the British?

Now for some examples of what I disliked about this book, lest I come across as equally lazy as Mr. Butler. Some are factual errors, some are evidence of his Islamophobic agenda.

Page 3: "Simple, subtle, remorseless, utterly lacking in grace, though not in beauty, the Sudan and Islam mirrored one another [...]" -- Ouch. Islam is "simple," "remorseless" and "utterly lacking in grace"? Hard to say that a religion that has spawned as much scholarship and cultural efflorescence as Islam has is "simple." To say nothing of the other ugly words he used to snipe with.

Page 5: "[...] the commander's experience with the 'sudd' -- the Arabic word for 'obstruction' from which the country derived its name [...]" Incorrect. The word "sudd" does indeed mean obstruction, but I have no idea where he read this bogus claim to Sudan deriving its name from "sudd." In fact, Sudan's name essentially means "the country of the Blacks," referring to the skin color of the inhabitants. Arabic is a language that cleverly (and often systematically) builds on triconsonantal roots. The three that make up Sudan are s-w-d; the three that make up "sudd" are s-d-d. Sudan and sudd are not at all related. Considering how basic this knowledge is to any student of Arabic, it's pretty obvious the author doesn't speak the language. Which means he couldn't avail himself of any of the sources in Arabic that could have helped him write a book about an Arabic-speaking figure whose life was spent in an Arabic-speaking country, and interacted a lot with another Arabic-speaking country (Egypt). This is not surprising, given his approval of British imperialism in Sudan (and elsewhere) and disdain for Islam.

Page 7: When describing Muhammad's first experience receiving the words of the Quran from the angel Gabriel, which is said to have happened in a cave, Butler wrote: "[j]ust why he was in the cave in the first place, and how long he stayed there, is unknown." What a catty remark. I bet he chuckled with great satisfaction at that one. Clearly he's implying Muhammad was a strange character for hanging out in a cave, probably up to no good. However, Muhammad's motives are well-known to history. Looking for respite from the worldly, bustling merchant city of Mecca, he liked to make a retreat to the solitude of the caves in order to clear his mind and recharge, spiritually. I've never heard any serious disputation about this.

Pages 7-8: "One recorded incident tells of Muhammed slaughtering seven hundred men in one caravan and selling their wives and children as slaves." He wrote this on the heels of an explanation that Muhammad liked to raid caravans, kill people, and forcibly convert them to Islam. Unfortunately, the event he's writing about never happened. What he's thinking of is the execution of a large number of men of the Banu Qurayza, a Jewish tribe that lived beside Muhammad and his community of believers in Medina. The traditional Islamic account of this event is that the Banu Qurayza, after making a pact of mutual defense and cooperation with Muhammad, reneged and put the Islamic community in grave physical peril. As a punishment for this crime, Muhammad had all the adult males and post-pubescent boys killed. I'm certainly not writing an apology for the violence, rather pointing out the shoddy scholarship of Butler. Whether or not Muhammad was overly harsh in his punishment is irrelevant: what is relevant is that Butler either willfully or unknowingly mischaracterized this as the result of a caravan raid. This is a well-known story among anyone, friend or foe, who has even a cursory knowledge about the history of Islam. Clearly Butler is not one of them.

Page 8: "[Muhammad] did not make his converts by his teaching or example, but literally with the point of his sword [...]" -- A typical accusation, though baseless. Muhammad built the early Islamic community by his teachings and examples; if there were any sword points involved, they were aimed at his followers, not by them. The earliest Muslims, who lived in Mecca, were brutalized by the Meccan elite. They didn't like the Muslims, whose message they felt threatened their way of life -- which, as successful merchants and guardians of a pagan shrine, was very comfortable. The early Muslims quite often found themselves at the wrong end of a sword, yet they followed Muhammad regardless.

Page 9: "After the death of Muhammaed, from a wound to the head received in battle in June of 632 [...]" -- Muhammad did not die of a head wound received in battle, and I have no idea where Butler read this fabrication (though I guarantee it wasn't an Arabic source, as pointed out earlier!). Muhammad came down with a fever and died from that, which wasn't very uncommon among the Meccans who moved to Medina. The climate of the latter seemed especially difficult for them and fever was a common malady. I see some very dubious books in Butler's bibliography, among them a book by noted Islamophobe Robert Spencer. I assume that is where Butler has been spoon-fed this nonsensical misinformation about Islam.

Page 21: On this page, he refers to ibn Abd al-Wahhab, the notorious founder of Wahhabism, as "Al-Wahhab." This faux pas further exposes his ignorance of the Arabic language and Islamic culture. "Al-Wahhab" is considered to be one of the names of God; it is considered sacrilegious to call anyone other than God by one of his 99 names. Again, if Butler lacks even this most basic of understandings about the religious and cultural milieu in which one of the main characters in this story lived, how can I trust anything else he's written? This is "Islamic Culture and Society 101" stuff.

Page 27: "[...]after Ali had been killed in battle near Karbala." -- Ali did not die in battle, nor did he die near Karbala. Ali was assassinated while praying in a mosque in Kufa. His son Husayn was killed in battle outside Karbala. Considering Butler brought this up to explain the reason for the Sunni-Shia split should be concerning. He truly does not have even a dilettante's understanding of this subject. The story of Husayn's death -- not Ali's -- outside Karbala is a very important, defining event for the Shia. To bungle its telling by mistakenly inserting Ali into the picture exposes Butler's profound ignorance of Islamic history. Again, why should I trust his knowledge of Sudanese history?

I'll stop there. I have a couple of more pages of notes, but I think you get the point.

I'll just make one more criticism, which is that I really hated his cynical attempt to shoehorn the Mahdist revolt into a narrative about modern Islamic terrorism. I say cynical because I'm certain he did this to sell books: he knows that a lurid title with the word "jihad" sells to a certain segment of the population; well-researched, scholarly books about obscure revolutionaries in 19th-century Sudan don't. But his ham-fisted attempts fail, in my opinion. He failed to convince me that there's any meaningful connection between the "Mahdi" fighting to expel a Western colonial power (Great Britain) and its puppet regime (Egypt) from his country and Islamic terrorists that attack Western civilians in Western countries. Butler feels very strongly that the Mahdist revolt was a precursor to 9/11 and the bombings in Madrid. It couldn't possibly be that the so-called Mahdi was simply a nationalist who used Islamic rhetoric in order to unite a disparate group of people in an attempt to gain independence from foreign rule. No, Butler is having none of that. He was adamant in denying this, saying that Muhammad Ahmad had international aims. Really? I'm very skeptical that a 19th century Sudanese revolutionary planned on storming the streets of London and beheading Christians there. In fact, the proof is in the pudding: after the British withdrew from Sudan, the so-called Mahdi victorious and in control of the majority of the country, he never expanded even into neighboring Egypt, let alone Western countries. So how exactly was he clearly the 19th century bin Laden instead of another 19th century nationalist revolutionary?

All in all, a terrible book by a close-minded ignoramus. Don't waste your time. Now I'm off to find a dispassionately written, well-researched book about the fascinating story of the Mahdist revolt.
… (més)
 
Marcat
zinama | Hi ha 1 ressenya més | Sep 22, 2022 |
4.25 stars

This is a book about the sinking of the Titanic, but more from the points of view of two of the closest ships that night. In fact, one of them – the Californian – was within sight distance and saw the distress rockets go up… and the captain, Stanley Lord, didn’t do anything. He was a very authoritarian captain and his subordinates didn’t feel that they could go against him. Further away (unfortunately a full 4 hours or so), was another ship – the Carpathia – whose captain, Arthur Rostron, immediately set sail as fast as the Carpathia had ever gone in her life to get to the Titanic as soon as possible. It was the Carpathia who plucked as many survivors as she could out of the lifeboats to safety.

This was really good. I’m sure I must have read snippets about these other ships in the other Titanic books I’ve read, but I don’t recall details from those books, though I knew the names of the ships. This was very detailed from those points of view. Leading up to the disaster, this also looked at brief biographies of the captains and a bit of history of the ship/cruise and wireless industries. There was also a close look at the inquiries afterward, both in the US and in Britain to get to the bottom of what happened that night.
… (més)
 
Marcat
LibraryCin | Hi ha 6 ressenyes més | Jun 23, 2021 |

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Estadístiques

Obres
13
Membres
666
Popularitat
#37,863
Valoració
4.0
Ressenyes
21
ISBN
38
Llengües
1

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