
Ataturk:
Lessons in Leadership From...
(Palgrave Macmillan)
Hardcover: 224 pages
Reviews
“This is the first genuine military biography of M. Kemal Ataturk ever written
by anybody anywhere, including Turkey. As such, it fills a long neglected void
and it is an important work of original scholarship. Colonel Austin Bay lays a
solid foundation for helping us understand the military career of this great
commander. Well-researched and very readable - it is an essential read for those
interested in this era or in the art of command.”
--Ed Erickson
“Turkey is very much in the news these days, and soldier, scholar and columnist Austin Bay provides us with a biography of Kemal Ataturk, the brilliant soldier and politician who created modern secular Turkey--and whose achievements are now being challenged. Anyone who wants to know more about Turkey should read this book."
--Michael Barone
"This book is a clear, concise and fast-paced account of Ataturk's military triumphs and rise to power. It brings him vividly to life and highlights the qualities that allowed him to become the most successful revolutionary of the 20th century."
--Stephen Kinzer
"In a changing world there is always something new to say about the authors of change throughout history. Austin Bay has widened our understanding of Mustafa Kemal, the general who founded and shaped the Turkish Republic, by showing convincingly that the choices made by Atatürk validate and are in turn validated by modern military doctrine. This is one reason for recommending his succinct account of Atatürk's life and achievements. His book justifies Atatürk's inclusion in the series of the world's great military leaders."
--Andrew Mango
"Austin Bay's Ataturk book is great history and great Hollywood. Before James Bond, there was Kemal Ataturk, a military genius who turned into a George Washington once his 007 days were over. After World War One Ataturk saved Turkey from being dismembered, then reformed it --turning Turkey into a very different place than it was when Ottoman sultans ruled."
--James F. Dunnigan