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Hugh Ambrose (1966–2015)

Author of The Pacific

2+ Works 1,267 Members 13 Reviews

About the Author

Hugh Ambrose is a noted historian. He was also a consultant for Steven Spielberg on the documentary, Price for Peace. In fact, he and Spielberg were the Executive Producers of that documentary. He also serves as a historical consultant on HBO's The Pacific miniseries. Ambrose is also the former show more vice president of the National World War II Museum. His love for history was passed down by his father, Stephen Edward Ambrose, who was also an accomplished historian and biographer of of U.S. Presidents Dwight D. Eisenhower and Richard Nixon. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Includes the name: Hugh Ambrose

Works by Hugh Ambrose

The Pacific (2010) 1,239 copies, 13 reviews

Associated Works

National Geographic Almanac of American History (2005) — Introduction — 124 copies, 2 reviews

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Ambrose, Hugh
Legal name
Ambrose, Hugh Alexander
Birthdate
1966-08-12
Date of death
2015-05-23
Gender
male
Education
University of Montana (BA, MA)
Occupations
historian
Organizations
The National WWII Museum
Relationships
Ambrose, Stephen E. (father)
Cause of death
lung cancer
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Baltimore, Maryland, USA
Place of death
Helena, Montana, USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

14 reviews
This readable account promised much & only delivered about 60% of what it promised. I wonder why Robert Leckie was left out of this volume & I can't help but think that he was seen as "not being brave enough" by the author. The author, unlike his father, who is the most obvious comparison, seems bogged down in Unit numbers & positions making this at times a difficult proposition to follow in order to work out orders of battle & where units are. Not a bad effort but if you want something that show more is more limited in time period covered but broader in scope then i think I would recommend Max Hastings book on the pacific war over this show less
I don't like the literary treatment of this book. It purports to be a non-fictional account of five participants in the Pacific Theater during World War II. When the writing comes from primary sources about actual events, it reads much as many compelling accounts, but with the interesting point of view of individual participants facing the tactical challenges of island and jungle warfare. For long passages, particularly about Gunnery Sergeant John Basilone, there is extensive unsubstantiated show more supposition about his activities and feelings about the Marines, line duty, liberty, bond tours, etc. that are unnecessary and pointless. The book would be more entertaining if the writer stuck to the facts as recorded, rather than making stuff up, and cut about 200 pages. Still, Mr. Ambrose has done a lot of work, and I think the book has value as a complement to the HBO series. show less
This is an amazing story & the story of the battle in the Pacific never seems to get the amount of attention in US history as the D-Day invasion of the continent of Europe, perhaps because so many Americans can trace their ancestry to Europe. The book really makes you understand and appreciate what these guys did and what they went through, in hellish conditions. I do think the author could have found a better way to present the story, rather than the huge chapters, with scenes & characters show more changing every few pages. I found the book very difficult reading and had to force myself to finish it. show less
½
I started to read this book with Steven Amborse's 'Band Of Brothers' in mind. And maybe that was a mistake because 'The Pacific' is not - in my humble opinion - on par with 'Band Of Brothers'. The storyline in it is not as clear and 'linear' as in the latter.
But - on the other hand - Steven Ambrose was a storyteller par excellence and hard to match by anyone.

Awards

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Statistics

Works
2
Also by
1
Members
1,267
Popularity
#20,252
Rating
3.8
Reviews
13
ISBNs
40
Languages
8

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