Автор
Джеймс Робертс

James Roberts

  • 4 книги
  • 9 читателей
4.3
9оценок
Рейтинг автора складывается из оценок его книг. На графике показано соотношение положительных, нейтральных и негативных оценок.
4.3
9оценок
5 4
4 4
3 1
2 0
1 0
без
оценки
2

Лучшие книги Джеймса Робертса

  • Трансформеры. Больше, чем кажется на первый взгляд Джеймс Робертс
    ISBN: 978-5-17-105464-9
    Год издания: 2017
    Издательство: АСТ
    Язык: Русский
    Война между автоботами и десептиконами окончена, автоботы главенствуют над Кибертроном. Но, несмотря на перемирие, планету охватывают беспорядки и волнения. Чтобы восстановить равновесие между фракциями, Родимус и команда автоботов отправляются на поиски Рыцарей Кибертрона -могущественных предков, способных вернуть планете её золотой век...
    Приключения экипажа корабля "Потаённый свет" в самых дальних уголках вселенной "Трансформеров" начинаются!
  • Transformers: Last Stand of the Wreckers Джеймс Робертс
    ISBN: 9781600107160
    Год издания: 2010
    Издательство: IDW Publishing
    Язык: Английский
    The Autobot special ops crew, The Wreckers, are sent to investigate Garrus-9, a prison that fell to the Decepticons three years ago, with no communication in or out since. Who's really behind the prison siege, and what dark secret awaits Springer there? The answers to those questions will send this mission to the razors edge!
  • Transformers Volume 7: Chaos Майк Коста
    ISBN: 9781613771402
    Год издания: 2012
    Издательство: IDW Publishing
    Язык: Английский
    CHAOS IS HERE! The long-awaited event that will have Transformers fans talking for years and have lasting repercussions on the lives of our heroes and villains! The Autobots land on Cybertron to discover Galvatron's plan is already in effect - but what is it he seeks in the heart of Cybertron? What could he possibly want on a dead planet? Optimus Prime must face off against Galvatron, in a battle where the fate of the whole planet rests on the outcome!
  • Killer Butterflies: Combat, Psychology and Morale in the British 19th (Western) Division 1915-18 Джеймс Робертс
    ISBN: 9781911512240
    Год издания: 2017
    Издательство: Helion & Company Limited
    In this ground-breaking work, James Roberts examines the willingness and ability of British volunteer and conscript infantrymen of the Great War to perform the soldier’s fundamental role: to kill or maim the enemy, and accept the attendant chance of being killed or wounded. The literature to date has been, paradoxically, somewhat silent on the soldier’s part in the act of killing. This study recovers this neglected narrative through the experiences of 19th (Western) Division, as recorded in their unit war diaries – a source generated primarily to record the experiences of combat. The study’s findings offer testimony to the courage and endurance of the Great War soldier in circumstances of terrible hardship and suffering. But they also reveal much lesser known and understood aspects of the soldier’s behaviour in combat. Many infantrymen were unable and/or unwilling to traverse the experiential divide between civilian life and the ultimate act of soldiery. This in itself indicates the immense psychological steps taken by those (perhaps the minority) who found themselves capable of killing. Those who did fight gravitated towards weapons (such as the machine-gun or Mills Bomb) that, primarily through visual distance, partially sanitised the act of maiming the enemy. The bayonet kill, a far more personal form of combat, was a rare act; despite the British Army’s undiminished championing of the bayonet as the principal weapon of the infantryman. But neither were the pacifistic legions always pawns in the hands of their senior commanders. Upon the physical No Man’s Land they discovered a behavioural grey area between complete obedience and absolute defiance, and were able to tacitly limit their commitment to combat through subtle passive behaviour such as ‘straggling’ or “going to ground”. In doing so they successfully wrestled back a degree of control over their battlefield fate. From a number of conclusions drawn by the study one predominates: civilian mores and values were not always surrendered the moment the infantryman crossed the parapet; many soldiers during the Great War found themselves willing servicemen, but reluctant killers.