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Updates

Paperback publication of All The King’s Men

Tuesday, February 26th, 2013

The paperback of All The King’s Men, with its original cover and new subtitle (‘The British Redcoat in the Age of Sword and Musket’) is published on 28 February 2013.

Britain’s Secret Treasures

Thursday, July 12th, 2012

Next Monday 16 July, at 8pm, Saul makes his debut on ITV1 as a guest presenter on Episode 1 of Britain’s Secret Treasures, hosted by Bettany Hughes and Michael Buerk.  Click here for details

Talk at Chalke Valley History Festival

Friday, June 29th, 2012

Much looking forward to discussing my new book, All the King’s Men, at the Chalke Valley History Festival in Wiltshire on Sunday 1 July. Click here for details.

More Press on Bullets, Boots and Bandages

Wednesday, February 15th, 2012

The Sunday Times  chose this Thursday’s episode 3 of Bullets, Boots and Bandages as a Critics’ choice: ‘Professor Saul David’s excellent series on military logistics turns to the “story of kit”, which gives him the opportunity to prance about wearing camouflaged body armour and “ballistic underwear” designed to protect the soldiers’ crown jewels from IEDs.’

The Radio Times added: ‘Saul David gets to grip with the latest kit in his excellent series about the nuts and bolts of warfare.  This final instalment starts with a longbow and we then get a brisk jog through the industrialisation of warfare.  But its also full of offbeat information – the Bank of England was set up to borrow money to finance wars; and schoolchildren collected conkers to make cordite in the First World War.  Give this man another series, and quickly.’

AA Gill, also in the Sunday Times, put the boot in: ‘Bullets, Boots and Bandages did for war what Moneball does for sport: extract the romance. Saul David is the latest eager young military historian who has gone up the line to death, walking and talking and holding up bits of murderous kit as if they were vibrators found in hotel drawers.’ Shame he didn’t watch episode one (food and health) where the murderous kit was conspicuous by its absence.

Talk at Topping’s, Bath, on 16 Feb

Monday, February 13th, 2012

Saul’s next talk about his new book All the King’s Men is at Topping’s Bookshop in Bath at 7.30 pm on Thursday 16 February.  Click here for more details

Saul’s new e-book ‘Great Military Commanders’

Friday, February 10th, 2012

Saul’s new e-book ‘Great Military Commanders: Marlborough, Wellington and Slim’ is now available to download from Amazon Click here

Feature in the Daily Mail

Thursday, February 9th, 2012

Today’s Daily Mail includes a two-page feature (‘Heroes Treated Like Scum) on Saul’s new book All the King’s Men.  Click here to read

Talk on the Iron Duke at the National Army Museum

Wednesday, February 8th, 2012

Saul is giving a talk this evening on ‘Wellington: The Iron Duke’ at the National Army Museum  Click here for details

BBC Five Live’s Richard Bacon praises Boots, Bullets and Bandages

Monday, February 6th, 2012

BBC Five Live’s Richard Bacon tweets that Saul’s new series Boots, Bullets and Bandages is ‘bloody good’ Click here for link

More praise for Bullets, Boots and Biscuits

Monday, February 6th, 2012

Saul’s new 3-part series on BBC4 continues to garner critical acclaim: Metro wrote: ‘How much does it take to feed an army of 80,000 men?  Three hundred cattle a day, roughly.  That’s the kind of minute detail that makes this account so fascinating… Energetic and engaging military history professor Saul David is the man leading us into battle.’

The Evening Standard  described Saul as ‘ineffably dashing’ and the series  as ‘a fascinating glimpse into the humbler side of warfare’.

The Sunday Times chose episode 2 as its ‘Pick of the day’ and Saul as ‘an engaging and enthusiastic presenter’, while the Radio Times added: ‘Historian Saul David tells fascinating stories of how generals stole a march on the enemy in his second instalment about military logistics. But the great thing is that the real detail comes from other experts, including a farrier…  It’s superb stuff, taking in the jerrycan and D-Day’s Mulberry harbour, through the difficulties of the Falklands right up to the present day.’