by Captain C. Shore, foreword by Peter R. Senich, author of The German Sniper and The Complete Book of U.S. Sniping. Now back in print, one of the scarcest and most sought after works on military shooting. The author was a sniper instructor with the British Army as it moved through Europe in 1944-45 and wrote this classic hands-on, nuts and bolts, how-to sniping book. Chapters include British Weapons and Equipment, All Sniping, Pistols, Machine Guns, Foreign Weapons, German Weapon Training, History of British Sniping, British Snipers in World War Two, Hunting as Sniper Training and more. 410 pages, 30 photos.
Reminds me of real life major I know who is also a shooting aficionado
Capt Shore lives and breathes his subject. The book is full of interesting little known facts and anecdotes. It is obviously not written by a practiced writer but it is written well enough to keep the reader engaged. It should be on the reading list at Sandhurst. This is the 18 Platoon (Sidney Jary) for sniping.
This is an interesting account and covers a lot of detail. This book is better suited to those with an interest in firearms. It covers more about the craft of sniping, the tactics and methods and the various weapon types and training than juicy war stories but found it interesting nonetheless. I think you need to have an interest in the subject to enjoy this book.
Hard to explain if not into shooting. This is not how to do but more of what was done. The accepted accuracy and distances are laughable now as technology has progressed massively. The stalking and observation requirements are impressive I doubt I would make the grade. Not an exciting read but informative well written and interesting!!!
I found the book interesting. I am dissatisfied with the Kindle version as the photos are minute and the description of the photos are so small you can not read them.
92% of the book was a good read. Like most books of this type to many abbreviations. Authors stop being lazy write all the words. Not TS APV "etc"
A decent length book and quite entertaining and informative, especially for gun enthusiasts. More technical information about the weopons would have been nice.
Written in 1948 this was not what I was expecting; very little in the way of actual sniping against the enemy, it is more a compendium and handbook on the dark arts of sniping in the British army at the end of WWII.