Tactics, Volume 1 (of 2). Introduction and Formal Tactics of Infantry by W. Balck
The Story
So, think of this as a dusty, brilliant door-thumper that cracked an army's code of operations. William Balck didn't just write about tactics—he penned a manual for the whole show. This first volume cracks open the basics: foot soldiers shaping into lines, firing in patterns, and puzzling over river crossings. There’s no actual narrative with a hero—unless you call infantry battalions heroes, which Balck makes you want to do. He lays out what happens when these 1,000 guys spread out, dig in, or march to the sound of chaos. The book solves weird little mysteries: Why do troops bunch up on certain ground? What’s the point of all that yelling and trumpet noise? By highlighting tough-and-everyday trade-offs—speed versus firepower, safety against reach—Balck frames a plot where armies live or die by their day-to-day tiny choices.
Why You Should Read It
This is not the dry history you dread reading for class. Balck writes like a professor with a beard older than you, but one who can tell jokes and just get things done. The gem in this volume is how he brings upfront the rough beauty in soldiers looking at maps knowing there’s no online backup—just boots on dirt and a big blind spot unless scouts send word. There’s this gritty slap—survival by choice—that cuts through the formal language. Did I groan at the word “concentration”? Sure did. But what kept me in was the puzzle: How these generals armed an army for a quick meal and a full assault. Plus, it’s weirdly get-you pumped thinking you were in a command tent, miles from a phone, but keeping hundreds of troops pointed between this little ridge and a getaway route. That’s a raw, nail-biting story you can feel in your bones.
Final Verdict
You’ll warm to Volume 1 if you hang out in weird libraries or just love any original answer how “ready” becomes a punch in the face. This is a perfect for fan of bare bones strategy (think Sun Tzu for regiments), Warhammer general nerds who nag over unit positions, or park hiker who keeps to 1914 camping guideposts. It explains a half-baked but strict training cycle history classes missed. So slide into those cotton blouses, imagine brass guitars on some battlefield morning, and crunch the reality scales—done quick enough to go walk in near noon and leave old-school commanders one-rubbing their moustaches.
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Emily Lee
6 months agoRight from the opening paragraph, the cross-referencing of different chapters makes it a great study tool. I’ll definitely be revisiting some of these chapters again soon.