Stephen Thomas Ross taught at the United States Naval War College, where he held the William V. Pratt Chair in Military History. A Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Williams College, Ross earned his Ph.D. from Princeton University and taught at the University of Nebraska and the University of Texas before taking up his position at the Naval War College, Ross also worked for the Defense Intelligence Agency as a military analyst and was a scholar-in-residence at the Central Intelligence Agency.
2.5/5 stars Dull writing and poor figures made this a hard read. The content itself was interesting for the most part but I think I was expecting something more robust in terms of detail - albeit this might just be me wanting to read more military flintlock fantasy.
Still, some interesting facts and tidbits in here.
This is a synthesis of previous works dealing with infantry tactics from Frederick and Maurice until the Prussia victory at Königgrätz. Europe went from tactical stagnation followed by reform and then a new "normal" that was shattered by the advent of rifles (which is thoroughly disputed today) and the repeater (which is really when warfare changed). Some details are off and the grand tactical maps are so bad as to be worthless. Still, this is the best introduction I know of to this arcane subject: tactics in the age of horse and musket.