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The First Atlantic Liner - Helen Doe - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Organisation Todt: From Autobahns to Atlantic Wall - John Christopher - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Welsh Military Airfields Through Time - Alan Phillips - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

1941 The Second World War at Sea in Photographs - Phil Carradice - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

The Golden Age of Streamlining - Colin Alexander - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

The Golden Age of Streamlining - Colin Alexander - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Between the two world wars there was a golden era of industrial design when the benefits of streamlining were realised, allowing for reduced wind resistance, faster transportation and a more efficient economy. The Art Deco-influenced style was also a huge public relations exercise in the glamour-obsessed 1920s and 1930s.Its most obvious manifestations were on the railways, with beautiful streamlined locomotives in daring colour schemes on prestigious named expresses, especially in Europe and North America. They included the Fliegender Hamburger diesel train in Germany, the American Mercury trains and of course Sir Nigel Gresley’s A4 Class, on which the streamlined casing and internal streamlining allowed Mallard to break the world speed record. The idea of streamlining made even more sense in the air, where the great airships were crossing the Atlantic, and aircraft like the Douglas DC3 cut through the air more easily than anything that came before. Meanwhile, on the world’s roads, buses and cars lost their perpendicular looks and marques like Cord and Bugatti led the way with increasingly aerodynamic, wind-tunnel-tested profiles. Designers like Raymond Loewy, as well as designing streamlined locomotives, began to apply the same style to products for which wind resistance was irrelevant, such as buildings, refrigerators and even pencil sharpeners.This book tells the story of the streamline era – its designers, its successes and failures, its inspiration and its legacy.

DKK 156.00
1

US Naval Aviation in the 1980s: Atlantic and Pacific Fleet Air Stations - Adrian Symonds - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Titanic Voices - Hannah Holman - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Glory Days: Swan Hunter - Richard De Kerbrech - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Channel Islands' Military Heritage - Andrew Powell Thomas - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Jigsaw Puzzles - Giles Orpen Smellie - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Jigsaw Puzzles - Giles Orpen Smellie - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

On 2 April 1982, Argentina invaded the Falkland Islands. The British Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher, was determined that Argentina’s seizure of British sovereign territory would not stand. A Task Force, led by the Royal Navy, was ordered to the South Atlantic to recover the Falklands. The campaign that followed became a remarkable chapter in British military history.This book gives a ‘warts and all’ description of Giles Orpen-Smellie’s experience, as a battalion intelligence officer, of how battlefield or tactical intelligence, relevant at battalion level during the battles ashore, was collected and assessed to develop a picture of the Argentine defenders. He explains what information was known at the time, the gaps in that information and how the information that was available influenced decisions. He goes on to compare what he believed he knew in 1982 with what he now believes to have been a rather different reality.The South Atlantic was the last place on earth that Britain had expected to mount a military operation. Consequently, almost no peacetime contingency planning had been done. The campaign that followed, widely regarded as an efficient and spectacular British success, was actually a much closer-run thing than had been realised when Argentine forces on the Falklands surrendered on 14 June 1982. The British victory was won by a bloody-minded determination to ‘muddle through’ and get the job done with boldness and risk-taking overcoming the previous lack of planning and preparation. It was this determination that gave the British their edge. However, the harsh school of conflict exposed some gaps in British military training and capabilities. Tactical intelligence was one of those gaps and this book describes how tactical intelligence almost became an Achilles heel in what was otherwise an impressive British military operation.

DKK 182.00
1

Pacific Steam Navigation Company - Ian Collard - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Too Few Too Far - George Thomsen - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Cunard Cruise Ships - Ian Collard - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Plymouth in 50 Buildings - Derek Tait - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Holland America Liners 1950-2015 - William H. Miller - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

The Ships of Scapa Flow - Campbell Mccutcheon - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

50 Gems of North Devon - Elizabeth J. Hammett - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Georgian Liverpool - Hugh Hollinghurst - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

A History of Aviation in Alderney - Edward Pinnegar - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

A-Z of Cork - Kieran Mccarthy - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Liverpool in Photographs - Mark Mcneill - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

The Unseen Falklands War - Nick Van Der Bijl - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Going East - R. J. Cook - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

BMW Mini - James Taylor - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk

Glasgow Harbour - Mike Mccreery - Bog - Amberley Publishing - Plusbog.dk