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ARMOR #1 Released Today!

February 7, 2020 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

The first episode of ARMOR, my new WW2 tank warfare series, is now available to read in Kindle and paperback! ARMOR #1: THE BATTLE OF NORTH AFRICA takes you into the fight against Rommel in North Africa in 1942, which ended in the disastrous Battle of Kasserine Pass.

In this episode, we meet the flawed, contentious, and tough American men who crew Boomer, a Sherman tank, as they land in Algeria believing they are liberating the French only to find themselves fighting against them. Once the gunfire stops and the French are again an ally, Boomer joins a vast army slogging across the muddy Atlas Mountains to go head to head with Field Marshal Rommel, the Desert Fox himself, who teaches them a harsh lesson in the realities of armored warfare.

Fast-paced, action-packed, and authentically portraying armored combat, ARMOR puts you in the loud, smelly, dangerous, and very powerful war machine that was the Sherman tank.

Get it now here! And be sure to check out the rest of the series, which is available for pre-order. ARMOR #2: THE FIGHT FOR SICILY releases February 28.

“An instant classic of World War II historical fiction … brilliantly written, populated with realistic and entirely human characters who stay with you long after finishing the last page, and searingly, unflinchingly open about the realities of combat during World War II as experienced by the crew of an M4 Sherman medium tank.” – The Sci-Fi and Fantasy Reviewer

Filed Under: Armor Series, Books, CRAIG'S WORK, Submarines & WW2, The Blog

ARMOR Series Debuts

January 29, 2020 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment


From Craig DiLouie, the bestselling author of the CRASH DIVE WW2 submarine adventure series, ARMOR is a new WW2 series that chronicles the journey of a tank crew through the Second World War, from North Africa to Berlin. Action-packed, authentic, and filled with flawed but tough men of the Greatest Generation, ARMOR drops the reader into the horror, brotherhood, and triumph of armored warfare.

Readers will fight alongside the crew as they go head to head with Tigers at Kasserine Pass (ARMOR #1: THE BATTLE OF NORTH AFRICA, February 7), race to Palermo in Sicily (ARMOR #2: THE FIGHT FOR SICILY, February 28), land during the horrific first assault wave at Omaha Beach on D-Day (ARMOR #3: FORTRESS EUROPE, March 27), survive Hitler’s last blitzkrieg in the Battle of the Bulge (ARMOR #4: THE BULGE, April 24), and batter their way into the heart of Nazi Germany, where the war ends, and they can now go home (ARMOR #5: REICH’S FALL, May 22).

All the while, the reader will live with the crew in the cramped, noisy, and vulnerable fighting machine that was the American Sherman tank, alternately criticized as “deathtraps” and praised as the “tank that won the war.” With appeal to tank, history, and action buffs, ARMOR pays equal attention to the Sherman tank as the men who fought in it. An enormous amount of research went into providing rich detail about the history, locales, and armored warfare. Thematically, these stories explore how men come together (or don’t) in combat, the things they do to stay sane and endure the horrors of war, how men must learn to survive the peace after surviving war, and why the Greatest Generation put their lives on the line to defeat the Nazis. While fought for the noblest cause, WW2 was also history’s most brutal conflict, the cost of which was staggering, with another cost paid by many of the veterans for the rest of their lives.

The books are available in eBook and trade paperback exclusively through Amazon.com. The omnibus will release June 26 along with the audiobook, narrated by Garrett Michael Brown. The covers, which imitate propaganda posters of the period, were designed by Eloise J. Knapp.

Click here to check it out. Thanks for reading!

Filed Under: Armor Series, Books, Submarines & WW2, The Blog

FIRST ARMOR REVIEW!

January 29, 2020 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

While ARMOR is historical military fiction and not sci-fi/fantasy, the Sci-Fi and Fantasy Reviewer enjoyed my previous work and decided to take on ARMOR, calling it an “instant classic of World War II historical fiction.”

The Reviewer added: “It is brilliantly written, populated with realistic and entirely human characters who stay with you long after finishing the last page, and is searingly, unflinchingly open about the realities of combat during World War II as experienced by the crew of an M4 Sherman medium tank. It takes the best elements of the dime store genre and blends it seamlessly with DiLouie’s inherent skill as a writer and his phenomenal imagination … a timely and welcome reminder of just what the Allies were fighting against, and what it was like to be a part of the spear tip of the American advance during the turning of the tide against the Axis regimes.”

Thank you, Sci-Fi and Fantasy Reviewer!

Click here to check out the complete review.

Filed Under: Armor Series, Books, Submarines & WW2, The Blog

TANKERS (2018)

January 8, 2020 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

Inspired by true events, TANKERS (2018) is a Russian movie about the crew of a KV-1 tank during 1942, at the darkest point in the German invasion. Like the similar American film FURY, which was about a Sherman Easy Eight tank, TANKERS takes plenty of liberties with tank combat but overall delivers the grit, realism, and tension of a great war movie.

During the first year of the invasion, the Soviets had about 500 KV1 heavy tanks in the field. While the new T34 tanks were superior in many respects, the KV1s had one big advantage, which was their heavy armor, almost impenetrable by the German Panzer IIIs and IVs. A single KV1 could hold up large formations, and in one desperate battle, a crew managed to destroy 16 German tanks and 10 other vehicles in the Rostov region.

The film begins with Captain Konovalov receiving command of a new tank after his platoon is knocked out. His KV1 is fairly broken down, and he has to scavenge for spare parts. This is a great part of the movie, the portrayal of the Russian tankers as basically mechanics desperate to keep their machines going. Otherwise, aside from Konovalov, we don’t get much more from the crew, though they’re distinctive and likeable. Adding to the drama is a female engineer shows up who is a wizard at fixing tanks, who happens to be Konovalov’s estranged wife. You can see where this is going, and there isn’t much more happening than that. But it’s a lot of fun.

The film is fairly accurate in terms of how the tanks worked, what they could do, and how a crew operated one of these big war machines, though some sacrifices are made for drama–similar to the way FURY’s Sherman took on a large body of SS, who surely would have wiped out Fury with some panzerfaust, among other things that didn’t add up. Most notable was the tankers weren’t as terrified as they would be, and there was little hustle in tank during the fights to get shots off (something FURY did really well), which bled a lot of tension out of the combat scenes.

Overall, it was a basic, fun war movie.

Filed Under: Movies & TV, Submarines & WW2, The Blog

MAD MEN

November 22, 2019 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

I was late to the party for MAD MEN, but I’m having fun with it, having just finished season 2. The show at times feels a bit like a soap opera, but overall I’m enjoying this depiction of the birth of advertising and the joys and sorrows of life in the early ’60s.

The show follows Don Draper (the fantastic Jon Hamm), a handsome, confident advertising whiz who works at a prestigious New York advertising agency. He’s the perfect man with the perfect wife, kids, and house in the suburbs. Other characters include his wife, who is suffering from boredom and angst about her security, and various people working at the agency. They live in the early 60s, a relatively utopian era of social order and prosperity, but everything is not as nice as it seems.

I love how the show presents the era from the viewpoint of its conventional wisdom, that everything is perfect, nobody should protest or rock the boat, homosexuality is demonized, women have no real security without men, women take care of house and kids but men call the shots, kids are largely ignored yet expected to behave perfectly, and that real men drink hard, fool around on their wives, compete with each other in an endless alpha male game, and otherwise rule their world. Everybody in the show seems happy with the way things are, not knowing any different; most of the characters are likeable but heavily flawed right to the edge of being detestable, and yet a product of their time. The show then presents the consequences of this society’s norms, letting the viewer judge the era for themselves.

The writing has a good pace with some nice if on-the-nose symbolism, the sets and costumes appear rendered in the era’s technicolor, the acting is strong, and the dialogue is witty. Besides the social commentary–not social commentary, really, but the invitation to the viewer for such–my favorite aspect of the show is seeing the birth of advertising. America enjoyed a healthy middle class at the time, people with money to spend and wanting to have it all, and corporations and their ad agencies delivered not only by providing products and new marvel gadgets, but by defining what a perfect life looked like. Besides an excellent summary of the principles of marketing, the show also presents fantastic commentary about the art of business. Even here, the show presents the consequences of this consumer utopia, showing people gaining a perfect life only to continue aging, feel empty, and suffer the malaise and uncertainty of midlife crisis.

Overall, I’m enjoying MAD MEN as an excellent period drama that captures the zeitgeist of the era, and look forward to continuing on to the next season. However, I don’t recommend it if you’re quitting smoking.

Filed Under: Movies & TV, Other History, The Blog

THE KING (2019)

November 12, 2019 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

Netflix’s THE KING provides a mashup of the historical and Shakespearean Henry IV Part 2 and Henry V with beautiful cinematography, brooding atmosphere, and plenty of medieval grit, but fails to either provide a true biopic or the powerful level of storytelling in its source material. Overall, it’s very enjoyable the way THE OUTLAW KING was, but as with that film, there was a pronounced lack of character development. The result is I was fully immersed in the film while I was watching, but then when it ended I shrugged and mostly forgot about it.

The historical Henry V (king 1413-1422) was the second king of the House of Lancaster, son of Henry IV, who overthrew Richard II to claim the throne. In his youth, he fought the Welsh in a revolt and helped his ailing father rule until political conflict drove them apart. When his father died in 1413, he assumed the crown and pressed his claims in France, leading to a string of victories, most famously Agincourt, when the English longbow and muddy field resulted in the slaughter of the flower of French chivalry. In this, Henry united his kingdom and established it as a major power.

The Shakespearean Henry IV Part 2, we see Henry as Prince Hal, living a life of debauchery with Falstaff as his mentor in the criminal underworld. When his father dies, he transforms into Henry V, a cunning king, having learned about what makes the common people tick. In Henry V, he goes to France and defeats the French host at Agincourt, bolstering his men’s courage with the rousing St. Crispin’s Day speech including the line, “We few, we happy few, we band of brothers.” Thematically, these stories are about growing from a boy to a man, the challenges of rule, and war.

THE KING appears aimed at marrying these two visions buttressed visually by plenty of medieval realism and atmosphere. Stylistically, it succeeds, from the great cinematography to the rich dialogue to the horrific battle itself. The acting is terrific, with Timothée Chalamet (the poor man’s Cillian Murphy) doing a fantastic job as the brooding Henry. There’s a bleakness and loneliness to the overall presentation, which worked for me. Thematically, the story appears to be about ruling wisely, which requires a balancing act between promoting peace while appearing strong, and finding people you can trust to give you honest and wise advice.

I had a number of criticisms of this film, such as Henry undermining his own goals of internal and external peace by murdering enemies (one of them casually) while invading France (nominally to further his father’s goals on the continent), and the way the Battle of Agincourt is presented, though it’s fun to watch. This didn’t hurt my appreciation, though. What did was the same lack of character development that made THE OUTLAW KING similarly a fun spectacle about people I didn’t care about. We never really get a sense of who Henry is, what his flaw or mis-belief is, and how he must change because of the central conflict (he does change, but not much). As with OUTLAW KING, a bride appears, whom the protagonist will treat as an equal, which smacks of pandering to modern sensibilities, as these brides have almost no screen time or influence in their films. As a result of plot taking charge over character, the story feels disjointed as it covers a lot of ground.

Overall, I liked THE KING quite a bit, hope Netflix makes more of these historical epics, and recommend a watch. I just hope in the future the writers take that extra leap and infuse the story engine with deeper, organic characterization to make me care more about what happens in the historical plot.

Filed Under: Movies & TV, Other History, The Blog

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