May you find helmet-sized boxes under your tree.
Happy holidays,
Mannie
Meant primarially for beginners and experienced novices (like myself) this blog is an informal, sometimes satiric, exploration of the steel combat helmet and its role in identifying, inspiring, and protecting the G.I.s of various nations over the past 100 years. This is the book I thought I'd like to write but with a longer shelf-life, no editors, publishers, or art directors; just me and you. copyright 2024, Mannie Gentile
I took a semester off and one of my resolutions of how to make best use of this time was to make a new helmet video.
I hope you find it of some use.
A first-rate read
Oliver C. Dorrell sheds some much-needed light on the often overlooked, and always fun to collect, Austrian family of M1-type helmets.
There are many helmet books out there, and a precious few that I find of this caliber. Dorrell approaches the subject with what seems to be both affection and scholarship; both of these are all too often missing from the usual stable of such books.
The art direction of this book is superior, richly illustrated with excellent photographs, drawings, and charts. Dorrell provides observation rather than conjecture, which is refreshing in this hobby. His approach is the "walk-around" style of presentation. His observations of each iteration of the Austrian M1 are clear, concise,,nearly complete.
He surprised me. My first stop, with any helmet reference book, are the final pages - where the sources should be. For some reason, all too frequently, collectors allow the so-called "experts" to make unsubstantiated claims, providing neither citations nor bibliography. Dorrell, provides both bibliography and references. Though I would have preferred citations, Dorrel relies heavily on his own observations, approaching the subject as a fellow enthusiast rather than a self-anointed guru.
The Austrian M1 family of helmets represent a group that too often go unnoticed by collectors, which is a shame as they are so interesting and so representative of the post-war/Cold War era in Europe, Dorrell explores every detail, compares every component, and seems to leave no stone unturned in his summary of these interesting helmets...and he provides the reader with many, many examples.
This is a solid piece of reference material, and a boon for both novice and advanced collector. I'm very happy to have this volume on my helmet bookshelf, it is informative, pretty to look at, and an altogether very useful book.
Let's see more of this and less of the helmet porn that passes for authoritative reference books filled with beautiful photos and unsubstantiated conjecture.
I really like this very worthwhile book, and I highly recommend it.
I'm hopeful that we'll see more from this collector.
Goodness gracious, to look at some of the helmet collecting sites, it often seems that many of the members have wet diapers.
Novices are often berated by self-styled "experts" for asking fundamental questions about helmets.
"Yeah, but..." counter the experts as they qualify their bullying - pronouncing that before a novice asks questions, they should do ample research before troubling the experts with such fundamental questions. Sadly, the I've never seen a moderator call out such bullying.
Another thing that bugs me (uh-oh...is this turning into a rant?) are the guys who shout "fake" at every opportunity, without giving any explanation for their reaction.
One guy pronounced a helmet as fake, and when the original poster asked him what he based his opinion on, the response was:
"Because it's fake."
My personal policy regarding the forums is that if I have nothing to add to the conversation, I say nothing. When I do make a comment, and someone wants to bicker about it, I remain aloof.
The forums exist for three reasons:
1. to show off your cool helmets
2. to get information about cool helmets.
3. to have fun
What is there in any of that to get one's panties in a bunch?
What are your experiences in this regard? share in the comments.
I gear this site toward the novices, and all questions are welcomed. You can always email me at: museumofamerica@myactv.net. I'd love to "talk helmets" with you.
Stay enthusiastic and keep having fun.
Mannie
Like manySchiffer books, it is beautiful, and ultimately disappointing.
The book profiles, in loving detail, fixed-bail McCord and Schlueter helmets of World War II. That is the first disappointment, it does not cover flexible-bail helmets...this is the sort of thing that propagates the common fallacy that flexible bails were solely post-war: this is particularly misleading for novice collectors, that belief is no fault of the author, but it would have been more satisfying, comprehensive, and useful had he included the flexible-bail models.
Despite that large omission, the book is chock-full of information, and, as is typical with Schiffer books, the volume is lush and the photos are a treat to behold, and the author has provided a superb variety of helmets, liners, straps, buckles, etc, to satisfy the novice and intermediate collector alike.
Much of the narrative information is based upon what the author observes about the pictured component. However, many assertions are made without citation of any sort. In many instances the author's assertions are qualified with phrases such as "...it seems likely that..." which is great, he is qualifying his statement. However, in other instances he will make a statment without qualifaction or citation, which leaves the reader in the position of simply having to take the authors word for it. I'd like to research further, I'd like the original source so that I can find more details...or even confirmation of the information; but again, no citations are given, no bibliography is provided, and the reader is left with only the word of the author to go on.
Since when is this good scholarship?
Even an eighth-grader is required to subscribe to the basic rules of research; indeed, most word processing programs have style guides for inserting footnotes and citations built right in to the system.
Again, this is the most fundamental rule of scholarly research - to prove your assertions, and to allow the reader opportunities to go to the sources listed in the bibliography to continue their research. Without these basics - required basics - of scholarship, the entire work can be called into question.
The University of Wisconsin states the resons we cite in a very succinct manner:
Different academic disciplines prefer different citation styles. In addition to Turabian, APA and MLA are common at UWW.
Besides these styles, there are Chicago, AAA, AP, and many others. You should only use the most current edition of the citation style unless told otherwise.
Ask your instructor which citation style he/she wants you to use for assignments. (1)
(1) https://libguides.uww.edu/turabian#:~:text=Most%20academic%20writing%20cites%20others,sources%20protects%20you%20from%20plagiarism [wasn't that simple?]
I would also add that citations show respect for your reader.
I'd like to say that this book is the exception, however, ninety percent of the books on my helmet bookshelf are without the fundamentals of citations, footnotes, references, and bibliography.
Why do we, as collectors, allow this (especially in this ninety-dollar book)?
Sadly, in future book reviews, I'll merely have to cut-and-paste the foregoing, so widespread is the problem.
In a classic case of the-pot-calling-the-kettle-black, I, myself, in this blog, have routinely omitted references, though in the past year I have corrected that lapse with citations whenever needed.
Despite these serious shortcomings, the book is filled with sumptious photos, which are great references, especially for the collector who has some experience in the hobby.
I recommend this utterly gorgeous book...
with some serious qualification.
See you next time.
Mannie
Four years ago, I was fortunate enough to acquire an Austro-Hungarian Berndorfer shell, and sooner, rather than later, I will post an entry on it.
When the helmet arrived, with it in the box was a long, brown, damp, lumpy mass...I know, right? I set that aside, uncertain what it was. Last week I was having a purge and came across that lump. Close examination revealed a mass of clay, rust, and what looked like perished leather; I started to dissect it. What was revealed was the very rusted original chinstrap cam-buckle.
I gave it a light scrub with a soft toothbrush which effectively got rid of the mud and the surface flakes of rust. Following that, I used a vinyl eraser to remove the rest of the rust. It cleaned up very well.