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War on the Border: Villa, Pershing, the Texas Rangers, and an American Invasion

by Jeff Guinn

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852306,663 (3.9)5
"From bestselling author Jeff Guinn, the dramatic story of how U.S.-Mexico border tensions erupted into open warfare in 1916, as a U.S. military expedition crossed the border to try to capture Mexican guerrilla Pancho Villa -- a military incursion whose effects still haunt the border region to this day"--… (more)
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This expansive book takes in a lot more territory than its title promises. If the reader wants or expects a narrative of the Pershing expedition alone, then the first half of the book is backstory. Add to that a healthy fifty or sixty pages of denouement, and one is left with about a hundred pages describing the expedition itself. Yet to me the background is too significant to be left out, though I could have done without the author taking it back for centuries, and since there was very little military action during the expedition itself and it's difficult to imagine any account of just the military events constituting anything more than a magazine article, the book gets a pass in this regard from this reviewer. The author writes entertainingly and effectively untangles some often rather convoluted situations. There are a few typographic errors, but not many by the standards of contemporary publishing. ( )
  Big_Bang_Gorilla | Jul 24, 2022 |
Fascinating Read About Seemingly Forgotten History. Let's face it, these days (and even when this elder Millenial was in school in the late 80s - early 2000s), American schools (at least, perhaps, outside the Southwest) barely even teach World War 1 itself - much less the other actions that were going on as America was trying to stay away from that war. I knew of exactly one story from the Punitive Expeditions before reading this book, and that was the story of George S Patton's first ever motorized attack - one of the events early in his career that made him truly legendary. Here, Guinn does a truly remarkable job of setting the stage and scope of the entire situation, from its earliest beginnings (even repeatedly referencing when the Spanish first came to central America) through the fates of the key players he has spent the text explaining. If you've never heard of this last war on Continental US soil before, do yourself a favor and read this book. If you want to understand more context for a lot of the current simmering tensions along the US/ Mexico border... do yourself a favor and read this book. Yes, the actions themselves were now slightly over a century ago - but if you're able to read at all, it means that it was in the time of no further from you than your great-great grandparents, and these actions still reverberate to this day in the lands and minds of those whose own great-great grandparents (or more recent) were actively involved here. Very "readable" narrative, never sounds overly "academic", and well documented to boot. Very much recommended. ( )
  BookAnonJeff | Jul 11, 2021 |
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For Charles and Mary Rogers, friends of the heart
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(Prologue) On Wednesday afternoon, March 8, in 1916, thirty-seven-year-old Pancho Villa crouched on a low hill about a mile south of the U.S.-Mexican border.
The chain of events that included Pancho Villa's raid on Columbus began ninety-one years earlier in 1825, when the first envoys of the United States government arrived in Mexico City.
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"From bestselling author Jeff Guinn, the dramatic story of how U.S.-Mexico border tensions erupted into open warfare in 1916, as a U.S. military expedition crossed the border to try to capture Mexican guerrilla Pancho Villa -- a military incursion whose effects still haunt the border region to this day"--

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