Posted on Jul 28, 2015
SSG Ray Strenkowski
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I was recently going through some old papers and came upon one of the last reading lists I created for my soldiers.

The list:

1. The Story of the Noncommissioned Officers Corps - Fisch/Wright
2. The Forgotten Soldier: The Classic WWII Autobiography - Sajer
3. About Face: The Odyssey of an American Warrior - COL Hackworth
4. THE EVOLUTION OF US ARMY TACTICAL DOCTRINE, 1946-76 - Doughty
5. The American Civil War and the Origins of Modern Warfare: Ideas, Organization, and Field Command - Hagerman

Does anyone else still use reading lists - This list is from around 2005/2006 but some very good discussions and views were generated.
Posted in these groups: Leadership abstract 007 LeadershipTrain2 Training
Edited 9 y ago
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MAJ(P) G9
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I'm a big fan of reading lists. I'm most happy with them when they are themed reading lists. That way it is easy to pick out a few books on a topic before moving onto the next topical list. I'm not a big fan of just the giant lists that don't cover any specific topics or have a specific purpose.
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COL Jon Thompson
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I never made my officers read even though I have been an avid reader. Looking back, that was a mistake. There are some good books on your list. I just re-read the book by COL Hackworth and have Forgotten Soldier coming up on my list to re-read. Most of my reading was done while I was on active duty and it interesting reading them now after several overseas deployments. Some things have not changed from what COL Hackworth wrote about in Vietnam.
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SSG Ray Strenkowski
SSG Ray Strenkowski
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COL Jon Thompson I agree, COL Hackworth's book is a favorite of mine and highly recommend it to anyone (Officer and Enlisted) who hasn't read it yet. It does hold true through time.
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