Despite its editorial shortcomings, this book should be compulsory reading for every cadet who passes through West Point, if only to point up the fallaciousness of the Patton myth.
All of his actions are seen to be driven by his own egotistical obsessions and his desire to preserve and enhance his personal reputation. When it became obvious that the first target of the German attack was the Meuse, Patton refused to desert his own objective and persisted in his drive towards Bastogne, despite the fact that this town was never completely encircled, the Panzers having simply bypassed it in their drive to the west.
With his pearl-handled revolvers he postured like a character from Wild West fiction, but, sadly, the lives of many brave young US servicemen were sacrificed to bolster this juvenile fantasy. His campaign was conducted in typical gung-ho, bull-at-a-gate style, which foundered and ground to a halt time and again against enemy units which - although green and untried - were professional in their craft and proved to be dour and resolute fighters who took dreadful toll of their ill-led adversaries.
Patton's influence on history must not be underestimated. He left a legacy which has dogged the U.S. military from Korea to Kosovo. If, as is reported, Nixon took Patton as an exemplar for his conduct of the war in Vietnam it is little wonder that the U.S.A. was driven out with its tail between its legs: the irresponsible, gung-ho Patton template almost guaranteed this outcome in the face of an implacable and dedicated enemy.
Read this book and weep, not just for the thousand of young lives recklessly squandered in the Ardennes, but also for the many more who subsequently fell in battle elsewhere for worship of a false god.