Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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17 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This is a real story about real people - I was one of them!, 30 Nov 2000
I may be biased but this is a great book. Why biased? Well I'm the 23 year old Weapons Director "Richie Gough" in the book. It's a true story, well researched and written by the author Mark Higgitt. This is the story of young men serving their country on a ship that was both happy and professional, that fought hard and valiantly to protect the troops landing onto the Falklands on the 21 May 1982 before, in the space of 22 minutes, being hit by bombs from Argentine aircraft no less than 17 times and therfore having to be abandoned to later sink in Falkland Sound. Focussing on the people that made the ship work and not the politics of the Falklands conflict the story telling is fast, informative and real. 22 lives were lost, many more of the crew were wounded both physically and emotionally. Real people from all walks of life averaging no more than 23 years old at the time of the conflict. Today, most of the crew are civilians but each year we gather in Plymouth to remember the fallen and celebrate the ship. But each year the memories of our brief encounter with the enemy keep our tales of bravery, foolhardiness and high sprits firmly to the fore. I recommend this book to Amazon readers as it is a true account of a brave ship, forgotten by the British public because of the short term memory that comes with modem media coverage. Add to this the short sightedness of the military enquiry board of the time and the name Ardent becomes only a proud memory for its survivors, friends and the families of the fallen. Read the book - you will be proud of the ship and its crew too, I promise. Richie Gough
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The fog of war, 6 Oct 2002
This book is a moving account of the exploits of HMS Ardent during the Falklands War of 1982. Written mainly from the points of view of the ordinary crew-members, it graphically illustrates how they were affected by the loss of their ship and their friends.As someone who was familiar with the ship and knew some of those who died, I read this book with great anticipation and was not disappointed. If you ever wanted to find out how ordinary people deal with life-threatening situations and with the aftermath, then this book is a good place to start. There are a few minor technical inaccuracies, but they do not detract from the narrative. My one main criticism is that there is no diagram of the ship's layout. Anyone unfamiliar with the Type 21 frigate would struggle to orientate themselves - then again, maybe that was the author's intent - to put the reader in the same position as the crew as they fought fires in compartments turned to scrap by Argentinian bombs.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of the finest books to come out of the Falklands War, 6 Jun 2007
One of the reviewers of the hard cover edition of this book slates it for 'excruciating detail' and being 'unreadable'. I couldn't disagree more. This is a must-read, and I would go so far as to say that if you were to read just one book to give you an idea what going to war in the Falklands was like for our sailors, this is the one.
All too often books on war gloss over the day to day detail of warfighting, skip the build-up, concentrate on a few people to tell the whole story. Real life isn't like that - there is lots of detail, there are lots of people. A Royal Navy warship doesn't carry 200 people for the fun of it; they all have jobs, they are all necessary, and for once here is a book that tries to tell the story of a great number of them.
As a result we have a good meaty book that will provide many days of reading, rewards re-reading and gives you a real feeling for the sheer horror of what that crew went through. There are pages to make you laugh out loud, others to bring you to the brink of tears and others to make you angry - angry at the government that procured a type of ship so poorly defended, angry at the government that allowed the war to happen, and angry that so many young men did not return.
Richie Gough's review ends by saying that this book will make you proud of the ship and her crew. He is right. I am.
Notably one of the complaints about the hardcover edition - the lack of any drawing showing the ship's layout - has been dealt with by the addition of such a diagram. It is, however, at the back of the book!
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