This is a easy to read book full of great history on the development of firearms in general and American guns and shooters in particular. David Harsanyi is an outstanding story-teller. He keeps the reader engrossed in the narrative from the time French explorer Samuel de Champlain's first harquebus shot sails through a cotton and wood shield to mangle a tactically surprised Iroquois chieftain until Eugene Stoner (inventor of the AR-15) keels over in his garage tinkering with guns at the age of seventy-four, dying a wealthy and content man.
I really enjoyed this book. As a veteran who has lugged around, fired, and cleaned M-14s, M-16s, M-60s, and the M2 Machine Gun (this one I did not lug around) I am ashamed to confess that I had not taken a keen interest in the history behind these marvelous weapons. Until now I had just seen these as tools and nothing more.
Harsanyi brings to life the drama of the times that necessitated the evolution of various firearms, the ingenuity of the men who forged them and the courage of those who carried them to explore unknown territory or into battle.
He also answers questions I occasionally ask myself when considering the issue of gun control. Questions like "How come Sears and Wards were able to sell guns through their catalogs when I was a kid in the 50s and 60s without raising anyone's hackles?" or "Why was 'gun control' not a problem then, but it is now?"
Hint: Democrats and The Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968 . Check out Chapter 21; The Great Argument.
Finally, Harsanyi has whet my appetite for more information on American entrepreneurs such as Samuel Colt, John Browning, Hiram Maxim, Richard Gatling and Oliver Winchester. He has also renewed my interest in the Texas Rangers, Berdan's Sharpshooters, and Morgan's Riflemen.
If any of these names rings a bell with you, grab this book and start reading. You'll be glad you did.