Ratings24
Average rating4.2
Late in the afternoon of Sunday, 3 October 1993, 140 elite US soldiers abseiled from helicopters into a teeming market neighbourhood in the heart of the city of Mogadishu, Somalia. Their mission was to abduct two top lieutenants of a Somali warlord and return to base. It was supposed to take them about an hour.
Instead, they were pinned down through a long and terrible night in a hostile city, fighting for their lives against thousands of heavily armed Somalis. When the unit was rescued the following morning, eighteen American soldiers were dead and more than seventy badly injured. The Somali toll was far worse – more than five hundred killed and over a thousand injured. Authoritative, gripping, and insightful, *Black Hawk Down* is a heart-stopping, minute-by-minute account of modern war and is destined to become a classic of war reporting.
Reviews with the most likes.
Great read. You get a real insight into the chaos and confusion of modern warfare. Read this before the movie came out, which is also highly recommended.
Truly incredible.
I read this book from three perspectives. First, as a soldier, I was interested in the intricacies of the battle. The relationship between the command and control elements and the men on the ground particularly intrigued me. Second, I am a journalism student. As this account is written by a journalist with no military background, I carried a professional curiosity about the accuracy and integrity of the story. Finally, as many others have, I wanted to see how the cinematic depiction differed from the original account. My findings, on all counts, show this book worthy of its public spotlight and professional emphasis.
This book does not hesitate to recount the blunders alongside the triumphs of the operation. For this reason it is listed on many military professional development reading lists. As a student of the profession of arms, I endorse this perspective.
Journalistically, this narrative seems to fit within the bounds of ethics, professional inquiry, and a rare humility. I appreciated the author's willingness to parry accolade and redirect attention to those who truly deserve it; the soldiers, Rangers, operators, and SEALs. His actions appear to support his intentions.
Questions regarding the disparities between film and book should be placed at rest. Making concessions on backstory and character development (challenging in film) one can see the two align as closely as possible.