Rorke's Drift, 1879: Pinned Like Rats in a Hole (Osprey Military Campaign)

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Ian Knight

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Pages: 96 (Paperback)

ISBN: 1855325063

Pub: Osprey Publishing

Pub date: 1996-01-26

Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 45953

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Reader Reviews:


5/5 stars

Osprey classic on the Empire (1/1 people found this helpful)

Great book especially for beginners on the subject or if you just want a quick overwies. Gripping account, well written, great pics.
Must have!

4/5 stars

The facts behind the fiction. (28/28 people found this helpful)

Cy Endfield & Stanley Baker's masterly film 'Zulu' is a stirring and hugely entertaining piece of work, but anyone with a historical interest in the actual events of the conflict at Rorke's Drift will find themselves wondering just how much of the on-screen action is authentic and how much evolved from the established dramatic conventions of action-movie making.

This books answers that impulse and paints a picture which is no less-stirring, but significantly more human and affecting. Far from the cliched and sterotypical characters of the film (the whimsically sentimental Welshmen, the raving missionary, the token female lust object, the class rivalry between Chard and Bromhead, the scoundrel Hook and the old-hand Sgt Major Bourne, etc) Knight's study presents us with real people in a real situation, and one can't help feeling the film would have been even better if it had stuck to the astonishing facts. Imagine, for example, the impact if early scenes in the film had included such details as the Rorke's Drift contingent being able to hear the gunshots at Isandlwana, a mere five miles away, or that lookouts mistook the advancing Zulu column for the return of their own Native Contingent.

The book is filled with excellent maps, time-lines and pictures - though some of colour plates provided by the book's illustrators are merely lurid where they should be evocative - and there is enough attention to the scale of the Zulu war as a whole, and its place in the Imperial ambitions of Britain to encourage further reading.

I saw the film 'Zulu' on Sunday afternoon many years ago, in my early teens, and was deeply moved by it. At that age I was unaware of the historical background to the Zulu war and the British presence in Africa, but the bare bones of the tale, the sheer human drama of being part of that contingent overwhelmed me. 'What must it have been like?', I kept asking myself.

Now, thanks to this book, I know.

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Categories

Amazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:

Books -> Subjects -> History -> Countries & Regions -> Africa
Books -> Subjects -> History -> North America
Books -> Subjects -> History -> Military History -> Armed Forces -> Land Forces
Books -> Subjects -> History -> World History -> 1751-1900
Books -> Subjects -> History -> General
Books -> Special Features -> Search Inside!
Books -> Refinements -> Language (feature_browse-bin) -> English
Books -> Refinements -> Age (feature_two_browse-bin)
Books -> Refinements -> Format (binding_browse-bin) -> Paperback

 

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