The machine gun is a uniquely American invention that, more than any other, revolutionized the way in which war was waged. In this engrossing history, Smith traces the uses of the rapid-fire gun and its slow integration into the weaponry of military forces around the world. Machine Gun is an enthralling account of how this weapon affected the very nature of warfare, and of the society out of which it arose - and which it in turn transformed inexorably.
Smith does a pretty good job of outlining the history of the machine gun and pointing out the huge contribution of American inventiveness to the development of the weapon.
My edition, however, was a simple paperback with an incomplete bibliography that doesn't match the author's references. In addition, Smith references a book by Barbara Tuchman (another book not in the bibliography) by the wrong title. There are no footnotes. I prefer those.
In addition, Smith lists the Colt handgun as being responsible for the accidental death of one of the sisters of Harriet Beecher Stowe. Stowe's sister was, apparently, injured by a handgun accidentally, but survived to an old age. This might be a defect in one of Smith's sources, however.
Not a bad book, and worth looking at. A better book with much of the same information is "The Gun" by C.J. Chivers. This is an account of the development and history of the A.K. 47. I recommend both for those interested in the topic.
This is a biography of some early inventors and some overly emotional, sentimental and antiquated discussion of their work. It isn't a technical history. It isn't a military history. It isn't a doctrinal history. It has little bearing on social science.
You do, however, learn where Richard Gatling's house in Hartford is, and that it was a little run down for a while but that it's now subdivided into apartments and has been spruced up, though nobody living there has any idea that Gatling lived there and there really should be a plaque or something.