Amazon.in:Customer reviews: The Bomber Mafia: A Dream, a Temptation, and the Longest Night of the Second World War
Skip to main content
.in
Hello Select your address
All
EN
Hello, sign in
Account & Lists
Returns & Orders
Cart
All
Sell Amazon miniTV Best Sellers Mobiles Today's Deals Customer Service Electronics Prime New Releases Amazon Pay Home & Kitchen Fashion Beauty & Personal Care Computers Books Toys & Games Coupons Sports, Fitness & Outdoors Grocery & Gourmet Foods Car & Motorbike Health, Household & Personal Care Gift Cards Home Improvement Baby Video Games Pet Supplies Gift Ideas Audible AmazonBasics Subscribe & Save Kindle eBooks
Amazon App

  • The Bomber Mafia: A Dream, a Temptation, and the Longest Night of the...
  • ›
  • Customer reviews

Customer reviews

4.4 out of 5 stars
4.4 out of 5
8,721 global ratings
5 star
62%
4 star
25%
3 star
9%
2 star
2%
1 star
1%
The Bomber Mafia: A Dream, a Temptation, and the Longest Night of the Second World War

The Bomber Mafia: A Dream, a Temptation, and the Longest Night of the Second World War

byMalcolm Gladwell
Write a review
How are ratings calculated?
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyses reviews to verify trustworthiness.
See All Buying Options

Top positive review

All positive reviews›
Amazon Customer
4.0 out of 5 starsgood read!
Reviewed in India 🇮🇳 on 4 March 2023
Unusual topic and as is typical of this author extremely well researched and written.
If you like to read a non-standard topic and see war through moral prisms this is an unique book.
Read more

Top critical review

All critical reviews›
Shivkumar
2.0 out of 5 starsBook cover & pages are in poor condition.
Reviewed in India 🇮🇳 on 1 May 2022
Book cover & pages are in poor condition.
Read more

Sign in to filter reviews
Filtered by
1 starClear filter
116 total ratings, 29 with reviews

There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.

From India

There are 0 reviews and 0 ratings from Indiawith 1 star

From other countries

David Swanson
1.0 out of 5 stars Malcolm Gladwell Claims Satan Won WWII But Jesus Does Drone Strikes
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 31 May 2021
Verified Purchase
I wish I were joking, even a little. Malcolm Gladwell’s book, The Bomber Mafia, maintains that Haywood Hansell was essentially Jesus tempted by the Devil when he refused to burn Japanese cities to the ground. Hansell was replaced, and Curtis LeMay put in charge of U.S. bombings of Japan during WWII. LeMay, Gladwell tells us, was none other than Satan. But what was very much needed, Gladwell claims, was Satanic immorality — the willingness to intentionally incinerate perhaps a million or so men, women, and children to advance one’s career. Only that and nothing else could have won the war most quickly, which created prosperity and peace for one and all (except the dead, I suppose, and anyone involved in all the subsequent wars or subsequent poverty). But in the end, WWII was only a battle, and the larger war was won by Hansell-Jesus because his dream of humanitarian precision bombing has now been realized (if you’re OK with murder by missile and willing to overlook that precision bombings have been used for years to kill mostly unknown innocent people while generating more enemies than they eliminate).

Gladwell begins his filthy piece of war normalization by admitting that his first short story, written as a child, was a fantasy about Hitler surviving and coming back to get you — in other words, the basic narrative of U.S. war propaganda for 75 years. Then Gladwell tells us that what he loves is obsessive people — no matter whether they’re obsessed with something good or something evil. Subtly and otherwise Gladwell builds a case for amorality, not just immorality, in this book. He starts by claiming that the invention of the bomb sight solved one of the 10 biggest technological problems of half a century. That problem was how to drop a bomb more accurately. Morally, that’s an outrage, not a problem to be lumped, as Gladwell lumps it, with how to cure diseases or produce food. Also, the bomb sight was a major failure that did not solve this supposedly critical problem, and Gladwell recounts that failure along with dozens of others in a stream of rolling SNAFUs that he treats as some sort of character-building signs of audacity, boldness, and christiness.

The goal of the “Bomber Mafia” (Mafia, like Satan, being a term of praise in this book) was supposedly to avoid the terrible ground war of WWI by planning for air wars instead. This, of course, worked out wonderfully, with WWII killing many more people than WWI by combining ground and air wars — although there’s not a single word in the book about ground fighting in WWII or the existence of the Soviet Union, because this is a U.S. book about the greatest generation waging the greatest war for America the Great; and the greatest break came at the greatest university (Harvard) with the successful test of the greatest tool of Satan our Savior, namely Napalm.

But I’m getting ahead of the story. Before Jesus makes an appearance, Martin Luther King Jr. has to do so, of course. You see, the dream of humanitarian air war was almost exactly like Dr. King’s dream of overcoming racism — apart from every possible detail. Gladwell doesn’t accept that this comparison is ludicrous, but calls the Dream of Air Wars “audacious” and turns immediately from the idea that bombing will bring peace to discussion of an amoral technological adventure. When Gladwell quotes a commentator suggesting that the inventor of the bomb sight would have attributed its invention to God, for all we can tell Gladwell probably agrees. Soon he’s in raptures over how the invention of the bomb sight was going to make war “almost bloodless,” and over the humanitarianism of the U.S. military bombing theorists who make up the Bombing Mafia devising schemes to bomb water supplies and power supplies (because killing large populations more slowly is divine).

Half the book is random nonsense, but some of it is worth repeating. For example, Gladwell believes that the Air Force Chapel in Colorado is especially holy, not just because it looks like they worship air wars, but also because it leaks when it rains — a major accomplishment once failure has become success, it seems.

The background of how WWII was created, and therefore how it might have been avoided, is given a total of five words in Gladwell’s book. Here are those five words: “But then Hitler attacked Poland.” Gladwell jumps from that to praising investment in preparing for unknown wars. Then he’s off on a debate between carpet bombing and precision bombing in Europe, during which he notes that carpet bombing doesn’t move populations to overthrow governments (pretending this is because it doesn’t greatly disturb people, as well as admitting that it generates hatred of those doing the bombing, and skirting the fact that governments tend not to actually care about the suffering within their borders, as well as skirting any application of the counter-productiveness of bombing to current U.S. wars, and — of course — putting up a pretense that Britain never bombed civilians until long after Germany did). There’s also not one word about the Nazis’ own bombing mafia later working for the U.S. military to help destroy places like Vietnam with Satan’s own Dupont Better Living Through Chemistry.

Through the debate between carpet bombing (the British) and precision bombing (the knights of the sacred U.S. mafia), Gladwell admits that the British position was driven by sadism and led by a sadist and a psychopath. These are his words, not mine. He admits that the U.S. approach failed terribly on its own terms and amounted to a delusional cult for true believers (his words). Yet we have to sit through page after page of what Holden Caulfield would have called all that David Copperfield crap. Where were each bomber mafioso’s parents from, what did they wear, how did they fart. It’s endless “humanization” of professional killers, while the book contains a total of three mentions of the Japanese victims of the triumphant arson from hell. The first mention is three sentences about how babies burned and people jumped in rivers. The second is a few words about the difficulty pilots had coping with the smell of burning flesh. The third is a guess at the number killed.

Even before he falls from Heaven, LeMay is depicted as murdering U.S. sailors in a practice exercise bombing a U.S. ship off the West Coast. There’s not a word about LeMay or Gladwell considering this a problem.

Much of the book is a build-up to LeMay’s decision to save the day by burning a million people. Gladwell opens this key section by claiming that humans have always waged war, which simply isn’t true. Human societies have gone millennia without anything resembling war. And nothing resembling current war existed in any human society more than a relative split second ago in terms of the existence of humanity. But war must be normal, and the possibility of not having it must be off the table, if you are going to discuss the most humani-satan-arian tactics for winning it *and* pose as a moralist.

The British were sadistic, of course, whereas the Americans were being hard-nosed and practical. This notion is possible, because Gladwell not only doesn’t quote or provide the name of or the cute little backstory for a single Japanese person, but he also doesn’t quote anything a single American said about the Japanese people — other than how they smelled when burning. Yet the U.S. military invented sticky burning gel, then build a fake Japanese city in Utah, then dropped the sticky gel on the city and watched it burn, then did the same thing to real Japanese cities while U.S. media outlets proposed destroying Japan, U.S. commanders said that after the war Japanese would be spoken only in hell, and U.S. soldiers mailed the bones of Japanese soldiers home to their girlfriends.

Gladwell improves on the supposed mental state of his reluctant bomber devils by inventing it, guessing at what they thought, putting words in the mouths even of people from whom many actual words are documented. He also quotes but brushes quickly past LeMay telling a reporter why he burned Tokyo. LeMay said he’d lose his job like the guy before him if he didn’t quickly do something, and that was what he could do. Systemic momentum: a real problem that is exacerbated by books like this one.

But mostly Gladwell glues morality onto his portrait of LeMay by eliminating the Japanese even more effectively than did the Napalm. In a typical passage like some others in the book, Gladwell quotes LeMay’s daughter as claiming that her father cared about the morality of what he was doing because he stood on the runway counting the planes before they took off to bomb Japan. He cared how many would come back. But there weren’t any Japanese victims on his runway — or in Gladwell’s book for that matter.

Gladwell praises LeMay’s behavior as more truly moral and having benefitted the world, while claiming that we admire Hansell’s morality because we can’t really help ourselves, whereas it’s a sort of Nietzschean and audacious immorality that we actually need, even if — according to Gladwell — it ends up being the most moral action in the end. But was it?

The traditional story ignores the firebombing of all the cities and jumps straight to the nuking of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, falsely claiming that Japan was not yet ready to surrender and that the nukes (or at least one of them and let’s not be sticklers about that second one) saved lives. That traditional story is bunk. But Gladwell is trying to replace it with a very similar story given a fresh coat of weaponized paint. In Gladwell’s version it was the months of burning down city after city that saved lives and ended the war and did the hard but proper thing, not the nuclear bombs.

Of course, as noted, there’s not one word about the possibility of having refrained from a decades long arms race with Japan, having chosen not to build up colonies and bases and threats and sanctions. Gladwell mentions in passing a guy named Claire Chennault, but not one word about how he helped the Chinese against the Japanese prior to Pearl Harbor — much less about how his widow helped Richard Nixon prevent peace in Vietnam (the war on Vietnam and many other wars not really existing in Gladwell’s leap from Satan winning the battle of WWII to Jesus winning the war for precision philanthropic bombings).

Any war can be avoided. Every war takes great efforts to begin. Any war can be halted. We can’t say exactly what would have worked. We can say that nothing was tried. We can say that the drive by the U.S. government to speed up the end of the war with Japan was driven largely by the desire to end it before the Soviet Union stepped in and ended it. We can say that the people who went to prison in the United States rather than take part in WWII, some of whom launched the Civil Rights movement of the coming decades from within those prison cells, would make more admirable characters than Gladwell’s beloved pyromaniacal chemists and cigar-chomping butchers.

On one thing Gladwell is right: people — including bombing mafiosi — cling fiercely to their faiths. The faith Western writers hold most dear may be the faith in World War II. As the nuclear bombings propaganda runs into trouble, we should not be shocked that someone produced this disgusting piece of murder romanticization as a backup narrative.
34 people found this helpful
Report abuse
Jeremy Booty
1.0 out of 5 stars A slapdash cut and paste effort
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 2 May 2021
Verified Purchase
I have in the past read and thoroughly enjoyed pieces by Malcolm Gladwell in the New Yorker, I have listened to and enjoyed his podcasts and I pre-ordered this book with great anticipation thinking that I would learn a different side to a subject I have read much about. I have never been so disappointed in the purchase of a book.

This book centers on the Bomber Mafia, a group of aviators who developed a theory, widely shared, that war could be conducted by way of air combat with little need for the widespread bloody trench warfare and death of emblematic of WW I. To the extent that there can be hope for a civilized war, these folks had it. And it was shared by all of the allies prior to and at the outset of WWII. Civillians should not and would not be warred upon unless they were actually combatants or working in war related industries. Wars would be brief as the winner would be the one to first stop the enemy's capacity to make war by eliminating a needed resource. The British tried it, so did the Americans and the conclusion drawn by the war's leaders was that it did not work. The shift was made from bombing the producers of resources to bombing the populations of the countries themselves.

This story has been told very well in a number of books and documentaries. Bombing Germany a documentary shown frequently on PBS comes to mind. Most of the many books on the Eight Airforce also do. Most recently, Twilight of the Gods by Ian Tolland did a masterful job in recounting the same events at the center of this book.

Gladwell's effort looks and reads like a paper typed at the last minute by a highschool student . The book is slim, the type looks like it was set for someone with impaired vision. Large numbers of long quotes from very few sources predominate. Professor Tami Biddle is cited 8 times in the index and most of those represent paragraphs in a book which is 206 pages long. I honestly think she should be listed as co-author.

Last but not least, Gladwell comes to a simplistic conclusion about a complex subject still argued about today. Do not buy this book.
397 people found this helpful
Report abuse
John Joss
1.0 out of 5 stars A major disappointment
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 20 May 2021
Verified Purchase
Malcolm Gladwell is a brilliant writer. Everyone says so, so it must be true.

This book proves that he is not that wonderful. Despite the excellent subject and its potential, problems diminish its impact. It reads like what it is: the transcript of collected podcasts sent straight to the printer, seemingly unedited.

The problems lie less with the subject, more with the execution. The prose is prolix, sloppy, convoluted, repetitive and often deficient. Dozens, scores, hundreds of sentences start with conjunctions (not forbidden, but overuse wearies the reader). The text is stuffed with needless modifiers—“really,” “actually,” “very,” “absolutely”—unlike Gladwell’s earlier, careful work. Unintended consequence: endless widows in the typescript.

In Gladwell’s research, many failings arise. He cites the work of Harold George and his role in creating “a giant defense contractor,” without naming it: TRW, a global aerospace power. Castigating British night bombing as impossibly inaccurate, he does not mention that flares were used to illuminate targets. While noting that bombing Japan was crucial and required the costly (in lives for the Marines) capture of the Marianas, he never even bothers to mention the Doolittle Tokyo raid from the aircraft carrier Hornet.

Gladwell writes that “heavily loaded B-29s flying from the Marianas needed a ferocious tailwind to take off.” Trust me, Malcolm, a ferocious tailwind will guarantee not only that those B-29s will not take off on the available runway, but will be uncontrollable until their ground speed exceeds that tailwind enough to create airflow over the wings and tail. That, in a ferocious tailwind, will almost certainly not occur before the uncontrollable B-29 has left the runway and entered the scenery. You need a ferocious HEADWIND. Ask any pilot. Ask your dog.

The other huge howler? Meteorology. Gladwell treats “the jet stream” as if it were a single, fixed event, on a constant course over Japan. Jet-stream effects vary globally, 24/7—fast flowing, narrow, meandering air currents whose parts may combine into one stream, or flow in various directions including opposite to the direction of the remainder of the jet. Ask your dog. Or better yet, since meteorology seems so alien to him, ask an editor.

He dashes off the Japanese surrender in two pages—it’s the core motivation for much of the book—without citing or even considering U.S. back-channel attempts to end the war without undue bloodshed. High-level Japanese resistance treated those initiatives with mokusatsu (silent contempt). Hiroshima and Nagasaki proved the bomber mafia’s basic thesis, and only the B-29 could have delivered it.

In sum, with ‘Mafia,’ Gladwell snatches defeat from the jaws of victory. It’s sloppy, undisciplined work, seemingly dashed off, to turn a series of podcasts into a book, for money. What a sad denouement for “one of the world’s greatest thinkers.”
86 people found this helpful
Report abuse
Brian
1.0 out of 5 stars A childlike approach to writing on war
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 17 November 2022
Verified Purchase
As many of the one star reviews note, this book is as if a teenager decided to pencil a book on bombing tactics. In the opening chapters Gladwell list that the only reason England chose to bomb at night under the supervision of Lindemann and Harris is that Lindemann is a sadist (this is not out of context), and Harris a psychopath. No mention at all that the bombers were much safer at night, both from ground artillery and German fighter pilots. To send your bombers during the day would create major casualties in the RAF, and somehow the author completely ignores this.

It such an incredible surface level attempt at nonfiction that at many parts I wanted to throw the book across the room, please do not waste your time. Maybe it’s good for a teenager that does not want to read, as it is short and simple, but any fan of nonfiction I would highly advise to steer away.
One person found this helpful
Report abuse
Captain Bill
1.0 out of 5 stars VERY DISAPPOINTING
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 22 November 2022
Verified Purchase
THE AUTHOR COLLECTS A RANGE OF ANECDOTES AND INTERVIEWS WITH SOME OF THE PLAYERS AND TELLS A MEDIOCRE STORY.HIS SO CALLED EXAMINATION OF THE MORALITY OF WW II BOMBING CAMPAIGNS IN JAPAN IGNORE THE ATROCITIES BY THE JAPANESE MILITARY IN CHINA AND ASIA. ALL THE US COMMANDERS WERE KEENLY AWARE OF THESE ATROCITIES AGAINST CIVILIANS STARTING IN THE 1930’S. CURTIS LEMAY WAS AWARE OF THIS AND UNDERSTOOD THE NEED TO DESTROY ALL THEIR INDUSTRIAL CITIES.TRAGICALLY CIVILIANS WERE THE TARGET BUT THE MESSAGE WAS DIRECTED TOWARD THE EMPEROR AND JAPANESE MILITARY LEADERSHIP.THEY CHOSE TO IGNORE IT AND LET THEIR POPULATION SUFFER TERRIBLY. THEY BEAR MUCH OF THE BLAME FOR THE MORAL FAILURE. THE AUTHOR FAILED IN THIS BOOK !
Report abuse
Mark Green
1.0 out of 5 stars A time to American exceptionalism.
Reviewed in Australia 🇦🇺 on 27 October 2022
Verified Purchase
I write this having read only a third of the book, as I’m unsure I have the desire to finish it.
Without wanting to ruin the read for others, perhaps a summary could be: USA = good / clever / stupendous / heroic, UK = not!
There is much more to this story, especially if you open the other eye!
Report abuse
Alexandra B.
1.0 out of 5 stars A fatuous read
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 13 July 2021
Verified Purchase
One of the more disappointing reads ever. Barely a pamphlet, the book is just silly and illogical. So the Norden bombsite was one of mankind’s greatest innovations, yet in practice is was nearly useless. Okay… Worse, Gladwell’s simplistic moralizing about the good bombers (precision) vs. bad bombers (carpet) is utterly one dimensional. War should always be the last option, but the real bad actors were the Axis powers who compelled the war. And Gladwell’s grand conclusion that carpet bombers may have carried the day in WWII but precision bombers ultimately prevailed is belied by the actual outcomes of modern war. Without question, it is far better that today we can hyper-target the bad guys and spare the innocent, but as for precision bombing being truly consequential, unless I’ve missed something over the past 60 or so years, the US and our allies haven’t achieved any longstanding, clear-cut victories comparable with WWII. I’ve enjoyed Gladwell’s previous books and articles, but this shoddy piece of work will make me very suspect of his future projects.
6 people found this helpful
Report abuse
Simon Coles
1.0 out of 5 stars Not good history - disappointing
Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on 30 October 2021
Verified Purchase
Gladwell trumpets daytime "precision bombing" as US invention, and Brits are inhuman for resorting to inaccurate, night-time area bombing, while completely ignoring the facts that the Brits had to resort to such tactics due to horrible bombing accuracy, navigation and no available fighter escort resulting in huge losses during early years of wwii. Check out Derek Robinson's "Damned Good Show" novel depicting early years of RAF Bomber Command.
Report abuse
Tim
1.0 out of 5 stars Tailwind errors…questioning all the he writes
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 6 February 2022
Verified Purchase
Given the fact that this is a story about aviation history, it would be wonderful if the author had even a little clue about the basics of flying. Taking off with a HEADWIND, not a TAILWIND is critical. (Pages 128-129) He repeatedly references the need to take off with a tailwind. Come on, Gladwell, if you’re going to write historic accounts of aviation, at least get the most basic elements of aviation correct. Pilot lesson number 1: Always take off into the wind if there is a wind. Never take off with a strong tailwind if at all possible.

This book was obviously not fact checked or read by editors with relevant experience. Such a basic mistake makes me wonder about the veracity of the entire story.
3 people found this helpful
Report abuse
JL
1.0 out of 5 stars Ripped and damaged
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 16 December 2022
Verified Purchase
The jacket cover was folded and torn. This was intended to be a Christmas gift. I do not feel I can use this as a gift in this condition.
Report abuse
  • ←Previous page
  • Next page→

Need customer service? Click here
‹ See all details for The Bomber Mafia: A Dream, a Temptation, and the Longest Night of the...

Your recently viewed items and featured recommendations
›
View or edit your browsing history
After viewing product detail pages, look here to find an easy way to navigate back to pages you are interested in.

Back to top
Get to Know Us
  • About Us
  • Careers
  • Press Releases
  • Amazon Science
Connect with Us
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
Make Money with Us
  • Sell on Amazon
  • Sell under Amazon Accelerator
  • Protect and Build Your Brand
  • Amazon Global Selling
  • Become an Affiliate
  • Fulfilment by Amazon
  • Advertise Your Products
  • Amazon Pay on Merchants
Let Us Help You
  • COVID-19 and Amazon
  • Your Account
  • Returns Centre
  • 100% Purchase Protection
  • Amazon App Download
  • Help
English
  • Australia
  • Brazil
  • Canada
  • China
  • France
  • Germany
  • Italy
  • Japan
  • Mexico
  • Netherlands
  • Poland
  • Singapore
  • Spain
  • Turkey
  • United Arab Emirates
  • United Kingdom
  • United States
AbeBooks
Books, art
& collectibles
Amazon Web Services
Scalable Cloud
Computing Services
Audible
Download
Audio Books
DPReview
Digital
Photography
IMDb
Movies, TV
& Celebrities
 
Shopbop
Designer
Fashion Brands
Amazon Business
Everything For
Your Business
Prime Now
2-Hour Delivery
on Everyday Items
Amazon Prime Music
90 million songs, ad-free
Over 15 million podcast episodes
 
  • Conditions of Use & Sale
  • Privacy Notice
  • Interest-Based Ads
© 1996-2023, Amazon.com, Inc. or its affiliates