Wargame Update

December 14, 2025

As much as my reading has suffered, 2025 has been a banner year for wargaming. Since getting hooked up with Mark Luther and the North Georgia Wargamers in March, I’ve managed to play a wargame nearly every Tuesday at Gigabites, our FLGS. In 2025 I’ve played games of Altar of Freedom, Chain of Command, Sharp Practice, I Ain’t Been Shot Mum, Midgard, Strength and Honour, Coastal Patrol, The Silver Bayonet, Fistful of Lead Reloaded, Check Your Six, Eagles to Glory, and Fire in the Sky. Mark and I are halfway through a campaign game of Taking the Gembloux Gap for Chain of Command.

A aerial view of a landscape

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A person looking at a game

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I’ve also raised a bunch of new armies this year. I finished printing and painting my Early imperial Romans and Ancient Britons in 28mm. I also finished printing and painting small AWI British and Colonial armies for Cowpens in 10mm.  I printed and painted two more 28mm armies for Midgard, Romano-British and Dark Ages Saxons. I also printed and painted a bunch of 1/300 aircraft: Bf-109s, Fw-190s, P-47s, P-51s and B-17s to play Fire in the Sky. Finally, I printed and painted French and British teams in 28mm for The Silver Bayonet along with a large assortment of monsters and a few pieces of terrain.

My biggest project for the year was putting together the miniatures, buildings, fencing, and terrain in 15mm for Chain of Command’s Taking the Gembloux Gap Pint Sized Campaign.This project involved printing and painting approximately 100 miniatures in 15mm, including both rifle platoons and all support options for both the Germans and the French, more than a dozen AFVs including Panzer I, II, III, IV, SdKfz 221& 223,  Souma S-35, Hotchkiss H39, Panhard A/C, 25mm and45mm French ATGs, 75mm German infantry gun, and a37mm ATG. On the terrain side I printed and painted a dozen or so buildings, a pair of culverts, six or eight feet of chain link fencing, another three or four feet of stone walls, and made 6-8 feet of hedges.


The Gemblolux Gap scenario using Chain of Command

I’m finishing out the year by creating 28mm medieval armies for the 100 Year War. I’m printing and painting the English and French armies for Agincourt using the Midgard rules which will run to about 150 figures, including about a dozen mounted. So far, I’ve completely printed the English and made a start on the French. I hope to have all the English painted before the year ends.

The English command team for Agincourt in 28mm

Thanks for sticking with me this year, and please stay tuned to see what happens next year!

Wrapping up my Shamefully Neglected Reading Blog for 2025

December 14, 2025

The last time I posted a reading update was 21 May when I had finished 29 books. Since then, I’ve read another 19 bringing my annual total to 48, the third consecutive year I didn’t reach 100 and the lowest number since I began tracking my reading in 2008. The biggest factor in the decline seems to be my massively increased interest in 3D printing and miniature wargaming, which consume a much larger proportion of my time. Since May I’ve finished:

Travels with George: In Search of Washington and His Legacy by Nathaniel Philbrick is a travelogue of the author and his wife’s retracing of Washington’s tours of New England and The South at the very beginning of his presidency. I’m afraid this one just didn’t do much for me. There wasn’t enough information about Washington’s experiences nor was there much from the era for the modern-day travels to resonate with. Philbrick’s travels with his wife weren’t particularly interesting either. The highlights of the book all seemed to revolve around the activities and adventures of his dog who accompanied them on most of the trip.

Wellington Against Junot: The First Invasion of Portugal, 1807–1808 by David Buttery was an outstanding book about Junot’s 1807 invasion of Portugal and Wellington’s 1808 counter invasion to turf him out. It is succinct, engaging and well written. I recommend it highly.

Russia Against Napoleon: The True Story of the Campaigns of War and Peace by Dominic Lieven was another outstanding book. This one covers the entirety of Russia’s second war with Napoleon, not only the 1812 invasion, but the 1813 and 1814 campaigns as well. The book is particularly strong on Russian strategic thinking and on her military infrastructure that converted her manpower and economic power to military power. There is a great deal of information on recruiting, training, equipping the armies and the logistic challenges of supporting them. One note, this book is not a tactical or operational blow-by-blow account, it covers the campaign in broad strokes after explaining how the Russians developed the military power to defeat Napoleon.

The Briar Club: A Thrilling and Powerful Story of Female Friendships and Secrets by Kate Quinn was an excellent book about a Washington D.C. boarding house for white collar single women in the 1950s. The book is intricately plotted and very well written and I enjoyed it immensely.

The Eagle and the Hart: The Tragedy of Richard II and Henry IV by Helen Castor was an excellent account of the reigns of these two kings, the last Plantagenet and the First Lancastrian. The book covers both main characters, their relationship, and how two rebellions eventually transitioned the ruling house from one grandson of Edward III to another. I found it fascinating and it, along with reading a biography of Henry V earlier in the year, sparked a new interest in Medieval warfare that has had me researching, printing and painting armies and reading rules. I recommend the book.

Clown Town (Slough House Book 9) and Standing by the Wall: The Collected Slough House Novellas both by Mick Herron are much of a muchness with previous Slough House books, if you’ve read and enjoyed them, you’ll want to read these. Clown Town should probably be read in sequence, but I think new readers would be OK starting their Slough House journey with Standing by the Wall.  

When the Moon Hits Your Eye by John Scalzi was a disappointing novel that started off in absurdity, when the Moon suddenly, literally, turned into cheese. Things just progressed from there. I’m sure someone out there enjoyed it, but it wasn’t my thing.

‘Tis Herself: A Memoir by Maureen O’Hara and John Nicoletti is the memoir of one of my favorite actresses. O’Hara comes across more or less exactly like the characters she made a career playing and she provided a lot of insight into the “golden age of Hollywood”. I enjoyed the book immensely.

The Glass Hotel: A novel by Emily St. John Mandel is a convoluted, but very well written, novel from one of my favorite authors. It tells the story of the protagonist in a non-sequential way that can be a little hard to follow if you’re not paying attention. I liked it, but not as much as I did the first time, I read it.

One True Thing: A Novel by Anna Quindlen is an absolutely wonderful book about a 20 something woman who leaves her publishing career and long-term relationship in NYC to care for her dying mother at the behest of her father, whom she idolizes. As the book progresses the protagonist’s views on her mother and father change profoundly. This book was extremely well written, and I got a tremendous amount out of it.  

Pompeii: The Living City by Alex Butterworth, Ray Laurence was one of those books that attempts to make history more” accessible” by fleshing out historical records with archeological findings and a great deal of extrapolating to tell plausible stories about people that we simply don’t actually know very much about. The stories in this book are engaging, but perhaps because I’ve read too much from Dame Mary Beard, I just wasn’t confident that they were accurate. Read it if you’re interested in Pompeii or ancient Rome, it was fun, I just wasn’t confident in it.

State of Wonder: A Novel by Ann Patchett was another outstanding novel about Dr. Marina Singh, a pharmacologist who travels to the Amazon rainforest to investigate the death of her colleague who had been sent to find Dr. Annick Swenson, Singh’s former mentor, who disappeared while researching a miraculous fertility drug. Much hilarity ensues including, but not limited to, snakes, drug dealers, a cannibalistic tribe, Singh’s affair with her boss, life in the darkest Amazon, and erstwhile hippies. The book is very evocative and well plotted; I had no idea what would happen next. I enjoyed it and I recommend it.

WWII: A Chronicle of Soldiering by James Jones was a massive disappointment. In 1975, James Jones wrote the text for an oversized coffee table book featuring visual art from World War II. The book was a best seller, praised for both its images and for Jones’s text, but went out of print when it proved impossible to re-license the original artwork used in the book. This Kindle edition provides Jones’ original prose, but not the artwork. And the prose is so closely linked to the artwork that without that context it simply doesn’t provide a coherent narrative. Avoid this and see if you can find the original from a library.

The Third Man by Graham Greene is the novella that Greene wrote as a “treatment” before writing the screenplay for the magnificent 1949 Orson Welles movie. Since the two were so closely linked there are very few differences between this and the film, the only one I’m aware of is changing the first name of the American protagonist from “Rollo” in the book to “Holly” in the film. If you like the movie, you’ll probably enjoy the book.

The War of Jenkins’ Ear: The Forgotten Struggle for North and South America: 1739-1742 by Robert Gaudi was an eye-opening little book about little known war. Because I grew up in coastal Georgia, I knew about the St Simon’s Island theater of the war which culminated in a Spanish defeat at the Battle of Bloody Marsh. I did not know that the war ranged much further than that to St Augustine Florida, Havana, Venezuela, and Panama so it was quite interesting to learn about the wider context of the war I knew a bit about.

While I Was Gone by Sue Miller is a great book about a veterinarian, happily married for many years to a pastor, whose bohemian past catches up with her when a former housemate and lover shows up at her practice with a sick dog. I don’t want to say too much else, but it really was a great book!

 
The Last Word and Other Stories by Graham Greene is a collection of short stories I checked out of the library so I could read The Lieutenant Died Last. That 1940 story, about a platoon of German paratroopers descending on a small English village to prepare an invasion was the inspiration for the film “Went the Day Well?” and also inspired Jack Higgins to write “The Eagle Has Landed”. After reading “The Lieutenant…”, I checked out the other stories which were also excellent, as one might expect from Greene.

The Face on the Milk Carton by Caroline B. Cooney was a young adult novel about Janie Johnson, 15-year-old girl, who sees her face as a 3-year-old on a milk carton as “Jennie Spring” a 3-year-old kidnapped from a New Jersey mall years before. Janie and her intrepid boyfriend Reeve eventually unravel the mystery.  This book highlights one issue with reading most things on Kindle. It was pretty good for a young adult novel, but it was no great shakes as an adult novel. Because I accessed it sight unseen from an online listing, I didn’t get the contextual information such as cover art, thickness, and placement, that a physical book would have clued me into it’s being for young adults. Anyway, if you’ve got any teens in your life, they might like it.

48 for the year.

A trip to Historicon

July 21, 2025

Each year the HMGS (Historical Miniature Wargaming Society) puts on a massive convention called Historicon. Lately they have been held in the Lancaster Convention center in Lancaster, PA. This was my third trip to Historicon and this time out I played in six games.

Played the battle of Azincourt using the Midgard rules from Too Fat Lardies (TFL). I had the right flank of the English. My archers couldn’t hit anything (maybe too much captured wine the night before?) so I pretty much got swept off the hill. Had a lot of fun and I love those rules.



Played a game of Nimitz/Halsey trying to push a British convoy into Malta in summer of 1941. I had a couple of task forces including Prince of Wales, a Town-class cruiser and half a dozen Tribal-class DDs. The operational game using Halsey is really cool and we got the convoy to Malta, but it was intercepted by the Italian fleet. Unfortunately time expired just as we got the ship miniatures on the table for the tactical game. I love the operational rules (Halsey), but didn’t really get to play the tactical ones (Nimitz).

Played a game of O-Group, the TFL battalion level rules. The German infantry battaliion and a platoon of Stugs were defending six Built Up Areas (BUAs) from a US infantry battalion with a company of 76mm Shermans. I had a company on the right flank. Big fight over the BUA in my sector, my company went “hesitant” (no manuever, can only fire at close range) four times. I had two platoons annihilated, the Company Commander killed, and lost the BUA, but counter attacked with the reserve platoon and ejected the Amis from the BUA on the last turn of the game for the win. I won a 250th birthday of the US Army coffee mug!



Next up was a game of Chain of Command 2.0 set during a hypothetical German airborne invasion of Malta. A German fallschirmjeager platoon has taken Luqa airfield and a platoon of the Royal Irish Fusiliers need to retake it before the Germans can fly in reinforcements. I had the Brits. On the last turn of the game the victory condition building was being held by a single German soldier with one point of shock and a wounded Senior Leader. We got within 2 inches of the building before being pinned by fire.


Next up was Et Sans Resultat (ESR) a set of operational level Napoleonic rules where each base is a battalion and an inch is 150 yards (12 inches = 1 miles). I had Massena’s corps, and my two compatriots, who had a corps each, were were attacking two Austrian Corps. It was a bit of a demo/learning game put on  by the author of the rules so we played for a couple of hours, learned a lot about the system, but didn’t reach any sort of result, although the Austrian’s were in deep kimchee in the center. Great system!

 

Finally was a spectacular game of the Battle of Bunker Hill using Live Free or Die in 28mm. The table was simply outstanding, easily the best table I saw at the con. 



I had Clinton’s brigade and landed on the beach after the initial British assault went in. I also controlled the British artillery, both the battery on Morton’s Hill, as well as HMS Spitfire. By the time I landed my infantry, my colleagues had pushed the Rebels out of their redoubts and completely off Breed’s Hill and hotly pursued them toward Bunker Hill. We ran out of time before reaching Bunker Hill but inflicted 12 stands of casualties on the Americans while suffering only 7 stands of our own so we got the minor victory.

 

It was a great con, saw all my old Lard America friends, played a bunch of beautiful games, drank a few adult beverages, and came home with too much stuff from the dealer’s room.

First Game of Chain of Command 2

July 9, 2025

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Wargame Post: The Battle of Peachtree Creek

May 21, 2025

Mark Luther and I played a game of Altar of Freedom yesterday at our FLGS Giga-Bites over in Marietta. It was Mark’s first game using these rules

The scenario was The Battle of Peachtree Creek, I had the Union, Mark took the Rebels. I had four small Corps with 24 brigades of infantry and 7 batteries of artillery against Mark’s two Corps with 22 brigades of infantry and 7 batteries.

Mark chose the early start with limited deployment and promptly achieved a breakthrough which gobbled up two Union HQs limiting my ability to rally broken units.

Eventually, I managed to close the breakthrough and Thomas (who I forgot to deploy) and Howard’s other two divisions arrived and it looked like the tide might be turning. We decided to end it early so we could avoid traffic on the way home.

I got caught up in the fighting and forgot to take pictures of the late game!


The attack begins! Hood, played by Mark Luther, opts to start at 1:00 pm albeit with only one corps in position.

Stewart’s Corps, capitalizing on his Energetic, and Reckless Attacker traits, acheives a small breakthrough the Union center…

Hooker’s HQ is over run preventing Hooker from rallying any of his routed brigades for he rest of the game.

Troops from Hooker and Howard manage to seal the breach, but there is still a rebel brigade behind US lines which over runs Howard’s HQ

My First Five Months of Reading

May 21, 2025

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I Ain’t Been Shot Mum AAR

May 18, 2025

I played a game of I Ain’t Been Shot Mum over at Giga-Bites, my FLGS, last Tuesday. I had a shot up company of the Grenadier Guards trying to hold a cluster of huts in the Anzio beachhead. I had only 30 guys, a single Sherman, and a pair of 57mm ATGs, against a company of 72 German infantry, an MG-42 section, and a pair of Tigers.

It was a lot of fun, but we never had a chance!

Mark Luther, the guy running the game, sure sets up a nice table.

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This week’s game will be the Battle of Peachtree Creek using Little Wars TV’s Altar of Freedom rules. Stay tuned for an AAR.

First Book Update for 2025 a Good Start to the Year

January 30, 2025

On the reading front things are picking up a bit from the end of last year. During January I’ve finished 12 books including:

The Reverse of the Medal, The Letter of Marque, The Thirteen-Gun Salute, The Nutmeg of Consolation, The Truelove, The Wine-Dark Sea, The Commodore, and The Yellow Admiral (1996) by Patrick O’Brian volumes 11 through 18 in the 21-volume set of books recounting the adventures of Royal Navy officer “Lucky” Jack Aubrey and his best friend surgeon, naturalist, and sometime spy Stephen Maturin during the Napoleonic War. This is my third or fourth time through the books since they were written in the late 90s and early 2000s and I’m just an enthralled by them this time as I was the last time I read them.

The Submarine Boys and the Spies Dodging the Sharks of the Deep by Victor G. Durham was what we would now call a YA book from 1910 that is mainly interesting as a cultural artifact. The book is about sixteen-year-old Captain Jack Benson and his two teenage pals Eph Somers, the navigator, and Hal Hastings, the engineer, together these three are the crew of apparently the most advanced submarine in the world which they are demonstrating for the US Navy. This is the fourth of eight books in the series so the story of how these fellows acquired the submarine is probably covered in previous books. The plot of the novel is simple, Jack and his pals bring the submarine down to Florida to demonstrate it’s capabilities but are waylaid by a passel of foreign evil-doers who are hell-bent on stealing the secrets of the new submarine, if not the submarine itself. There is much too-ing and fro-ing, pretty girls, skull-duggary, etc but in the end all is well and Jack and his pals proceed to their next adventure. As I say this one was mostly interesting for the glimpse into a bygone culture that it provides so I won’t be reading the other six. Hat tip to long-time friend Dan Mason for sending me a 110 year old hardback copy of the book.

The Garner Files: A Memoir by James Garner and Jon Winokur is an absolutely delightful memoir from one of my favorite actors. Garner tells the story of his life from birth through 2011 or so with the same wry, self-deprecating voice that was such a feature of his acting. The book was hugely entertaining and as a bonus included a capsule “review’ from Garner on each of his movies. If you’re a fan of Garner you’ll enjoy this book.

At War With Ourselves: My Tour of Duty in the Trump White House by H.R. McMaster is the heartbreaking story of McMaster’s time as National Security Advisor in 2017 and 2018. For anyone who followed national security issues during that period the book is pretty much exactly what you expect. It is the story of a group of men trying to stave off the worst impulses of the worst POTUS in several lifetimes, if not ever. I just can’t recommend it because it is too depressing and you already know all this stuff.

Nine Princes in Amber by Roger Zelazny is the first volume in The Amber Chronicles which I remember reading avidly in the late 1980s. Although I remember being enthralled by them back in the 80s I retained no real memories of the characters or the plot so when I saw that a new omnibus edition was available with all ten novels I checked it out of the local library to see if I needed to buy it. After reading the first book, I do not need to go any further, and can’t for the life of me remember why I liked them so much back then. I’m a little sad that something I once enjoyed is no longer a source of entertainment, but I least the library saved me the $15.

 12 for the year

First Wargame Post

January 29, 2025

Played the first two turns of my first Midgard game. It’s a pair of 300-point armies, Early Imperial Roman and ancient Briton in the first scenario from the book called Battle.

Midgard scenarios start with players each rolling 2D6, the highest total has the opportunity to challenge the other side to a single combat. The Britons won the single combat roll and challenged the Romans to single combat. Stratocumulous (brother of Crushidomnus) meets Senior Centurion Notorius Scaeva in the center of the field….

And, realizing he has bitten off more than he can chew, dies on the point of Scaeva’s gladius..

The Britons start down two reputation tokens.

After killing Stratocumulous in the pre-game challenge, Roman turn 1, the cavalry goes out inconclusively melees a unit of Briton slingers driving them back, but Odius Defecator, the cav commander takes a pellet to the forehead. In the center the Roman line of slingers and archers advance and destroy a unit of slingers with shooting.

On Briton turn 1 the chariots come out and charge the cavalry inflicting one Stamina point and forcing them back. The Briton slingers shoot and inflict a Stamina point on the Roman slingers

Roman turn 2 sees the archers advance to put the last unit of Briton slingers in their Killing Zone. Despite all three Roman missile units being engaged, the shooting is ineffective except for wounding Motahedus, youngest son of Crushidomnus.

Briton turn 2 sees the Briton warriors advance to punish the impetuous but unwary Roman archers in melee, but bad Briton dice and good Roman support dice save the day and the Romans retreat with only their pride wounded.



Here’s the table at the end of turn 2 current reputation level is Romans-10, Britons-6. Loosing Stratocumulous in the pre-game really hurt.

I’ll be back tomorrow with my first book post of the year.

Closing Out the Year

January 1, 2025

Since my last post I’ve only finished five books, which brings me to 65 for the year. This is the lowest total of any year since I began keeping track of my reading in 2008.

The last five books were The Surgeon’s Mate, The Ionian Mission, Treason’s Harbour, and The Far Side of the World, volumes 7-10 in Patrick O’Brian’s Aubrey-Maturin series and Frederick Forsyth’s The Shepherd, which I read every Christmas eve. The Aubrey-Maturin books are just as good this time around as they were the first three or four times I read them over the last 20 years. I recommend them to anyone who enjoys Age of Fighting Sail books. The Shepherd is both the quintessential Christmas Ghost story and an outstanding aviation story. The movie adaptation on AppleTV+ is pretty good as well.

I would up with 65 books for the year.

Gaming wise, I’m continuing to grind away printing and painting armies for the new Midgard rules from Reisswitz Press. I’m starting with Early Imperial Roman and Ancient Briton armies and will then branch out into Vikings, Goths, Late Imperial Romans, and Saxons. Once the armies are completed, they can be used for Midgard, Infamy Infamy, and Saga. All the figures will be 3D printed and I’ve already acquired all the necessary stl files and the rule sets and supplements.

 I’m about halfway through the initial armies. For the Romans I’ve finished the command figures, the archers, the slingers, the cavalry, and one of six units of infantry. The Britons have the chariots, the slingers, the command figures, and one of nine units of infantry. Stay tuned for pictures.

 Finally, I played my first boardgame in a very long time recently. A buddy who is reading Eisenhower’s Crusade in Europe got interested in playing a D-Day/Western Europe game. So, he came over and we broke out Hexasim’s Liberty Roads. I’ve owned it for years but have only played a couple of turns at a local convention years ago. We played through the introductory Cobra scenario a couple times to learn the rules and now we’re confident we’ve figured it out and will run through Cobra one more time before starting the campaign game.

Well, that’s about it. Thanks to everyone who has read this blog over this year and all the other years and hopefully I’ll update it more frequently in the coming year.

I hope everyone has a safe and prosperous New Year!


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