What do Army junior officers actually recommend reading?: Their own top 10

Everyone is always telling junior officers what to read, so
in the
February issue of Army magazine I
was pleased to see their
own list of favorites, compiled by "Company Command," with also-rans also
identified.
1. Once an Eagle,
by Anton Myrer
2. We Were Soldiers
Once . . . and Young, by Harold Moore and Joseph Galloway
3. Platoon Leader,
by James Mcdonough
4. Taking the Guidon:
Exceptional Leadership at the Company Level, by Nate Allen and Tony Burgess
5. Black Hearts,
by Jim Frederick
6. Small Unit
Leadership, by Dandridge Malone
7. On Killing, by
Dave Grossman
8. Band of Brothers,
by Stephen Ambrose
9. Made to Stick,
by Chip Heath and Dan Heath
10. Infantry Attacks,
by Erwin Rommel
Also-rans include The
Good Soldiers, by David Finkel (no. 15 with a bullet). At no. 25 I was
impressed to see East of Chosin, by
Roy Appleman. I actually thought that The
Defense of Jisr al-Doreaa, by Michael Burgone and Albert Marckwardt, would
be higher than no. 37, as would be the book on which it is based, The Defence of Duffer's Drift, by E.D.
Swinton, which came in at no. 20.
I've heard one aging Army Ranger lambaste Once an Eagle as a cheap, melodramatic
novel. Say what you will, I don't think one can understand today's Army without
having read it. Which is why I dedicated by novel A Soldier's Duty (which is not on anyone's list) in part "to Sam
and Courtney."
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