Reviews
“Meticulously researched and well written, Lengel’s Thunder and Flames succeeds in clarifying how the AEF performed while under French command. Valuable and highly commendable.”—H-Net Reviews
“Lengel writes well, and mixes analysis of policy, tactics, and doctrine with battle narrative, often seasoned by first hand accounts, and reminds us that the failures in France led to intense study of tactics, logistics, and mobilization of men and industry which stood the nation in good stead in a later war. This is a very good read for anyone interested in the AEF or the Great War.”—NYMAS Review
“Lengel’s book is valuable because he draws heavily upon German and French military records as well as those of the U.S. Army. And he concludes that much of what earlier historians have written about key events does not hold up.“ - Washington Times
“Lengel highlights the Americans’ sense of saving the day at the last minute, their frequent dismissal of the poilus as burned-out, prone to panic and reluctant to fight. But using French records, Lengel establishes the French as first-rate combatants, skilled alike in minor tactics and larger combined-arms operations.”—Military History Quarterly
“Lengel has done an admirable job cutting through the decades of legend and half-truths surrounding the American Expeditionary Forces in the First World War. Students of the war will owe him a great debt for this comprehensive and effective book.”—Michael S. Neiberg, author of Dance of the Furies: Europe and the Outbreak of World War I
“Lengel employs meticulous research and vivid, fast-paced prose to dissect American soldiers’ ‘baptism by fire’ on the Western Front. It is a great read and a major scholarly contribution—no one will ever again be able to claim that America was ‘barely bloodied’ by World War I.”—Jennifer D. Keene, author, Doughboys, the Great War and the Remaking of America