The AK-47, or ‘Kalashnikov’, is the most
abundant and efficient firearm on earth. It is so light, it can be used by
children and it never jams. It has transformed the way we fight wars, and its
story is the chilling story of modern warfare. It is the everyman’s gun, used
by guerrilla, terrorists and dictators everywhere. The Gun
features villains and idealists, profiteers and killers, superpowers and
revolutionaries and tells the incredible story of how the Kalashnikov has
transformed the way we fight.
C. J. Chivers’s extraordinary and hugely detailed new book, which I found fascinating and frightening in equal measures, tells
an alternative history of the world as seen through these terrible weapons. He
traces them back to their origins in the early experiments of Gatling and
Maxim, and examines the first appearance of the machine-gun – a weapon that
first created the ‘asymmetric’ colonial massacres enjoyed by the British in
Africa but which then led to the nightmarish stalemate of the First World War.
The quest for ever greater firepower and mobility culminated in the AK-47 at the
beginning of the Cold War, a weapon so remarkable that, over sixty years after
its invention and having broken free of all state control, it has become
central to civil wars all over the world.
“They don’t break, they can be used by children, and there are up to 100 million of them. The AK-47 has changed war” – Sunday Times
A book for history buffs (me) and those fascinated by guns (not me).
About the author:
C. J. (Christopher
John) Chivers is a senior
writer for The New York Times. He was an infantry officer in the US
Marines from 1988 to 1994 and served in the First Gulf War. He is the recipient
of numerous prizes, including a shared Pulitzer for International Reporting in
2009 for coverage of the war in
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