Book Review: The Grand Old Lady of No Man's Land, by Dolf Goldsmith
Forgotten Weapons
•
5m 24s
I got an email from a fellow a few days ago asking if there is a good book out there on the Vickers gun, so I figured it would be a good time to do a review of Dolf Goldsmith's gold standard work, The Grand Old Lady of No Man's Land. The good news is that it covers pretty much everything you would want to know about the Vickers in all its iterations...the bad news is that it's very difficult to find these days. Any price under $200 is very good, and worth buying at.
Up Next in Forgotten Weapons
-
Book Review: The Devil's Paintbrush, ...
One of my favorite books to just flip through at random is Dolf Goldsmith's The Devil's Paintbrush: Sir Hiram Maxim's Gun. Every time I open it, I find another detail of information that I had overlooked or under-appreciated before - it is a wealth of information on the Maxim gun in all its forms...
-
BSA Prototype .45ACP Pistol
BSA (Birmingham Small Arms) was the largest private arms maker in the UK during World War One, and when the war ended it of course saw its huge military contracts evaporate. One of BSA's efforts to develop new markets and product lines was to devise a series of self-loading pistols. These also in...
-
Book Review: Pistols of World War I
Today's book is Pistols of World War I, by Robert J. Adamek. It's a good overview of all the significant handguns used by combatants on both sides of the war (90 pistols among 16 countries). There isn't a whole lot of description and history for each individual gun, but they do each have statisti...