Posted by
Kate on September 10, 2009
Early in 2010 we will bringing you the Raid title Certain Death in Sierre Leona – The SAS and Operation Barras 2000. This was the rescue operation launched by the SAS (part of the United Kingdom’s Special Forces), to rescue a group of Royal Irish Regiment soldiers who had been captured by a gang of rebel forces. The rebels, who went by the colourful name of the West Side Boyz, also captured some WMIKs, which were being used by the Royal Irish.
Email this
|
Technorati Links
|
Save to del.icio.us
|
Digg This!
|
Stumble It!
Permalink
|
Comments (1)
Posted by
Ed on June 26, 2009
Osprey have now made it possible for our North American customers to Pre-order Osprey titles 3 months ahead of the publication date.
Email this
|
Technorati Links
|
Save to del.icio.us
|
Digg This!
|
Stumble It!
Permalink
|
Comments (0)
Posted by
Mike on January 19, 2009
As I promised here, every month we are going to announce what books have been re-printed and have been brought back into print and are once again available to buy online. The Production team here have been working their socks off to get a very sizeable chuck of our books back in stock - 40 titles this month - and nearly 80 titles due in for next month!
Email this
|
Technorati Links
|
Save to del.icio.us
|
Digg This!
|
Stumble It!
Permalink
|
Comments (6)
Posted by
John on October 18, 2008
I recently had the chance to interview Gary Edmundson, one of the authors of our Modelling series. Gary was born in Sunderland in 1956. At the age of ten he emigrated with his family to Canada. He is currently living in Fort Saskatchewan, working in the chemical industry as an analyser technician. An interest in military aviation led to building military models for a hobby and Gary is now a regular contributor to military modelling magazines.
Email this
|
Technorati Links
|
Save to del.icio.us
|
Digg This!
|
Stumble It!
Permalink
|
Comments (0)
Posted by
Richard on July 17, 2008
I read today that the civilian version of the Osprey tilt-rotorcraft will soon be available to buy. So if you wish to deploy you and your family at the beach this summer in a way that gets you noticed then dig out that spare $18-23 million stuffed under the bed and you are all set.
Email this
|
Technorati Links
|
Save to del.icio.us
|
Digg This!
|
Stumble It!
Permalink
|
Comments (0)
Posted by
Phil on July 07, 2008
Recently, with one of my typical flights of fancy, I started to ponder on some of the military sayings and quotes that have achieved fame throughout history. My personal favourites are:
"The sun will never set on the British Empire – God does not trust the English in the dark" – Anon
Email this
|
Technorati Links
|
Save to del.icio.us
|
Digg This!
|
Stumble It!
Permalink
|
Comments (9)
Posted by
Mike on June 19, 2008
To celebrate the fact that the Osprey Blog is now a year old, we are running The Osprey Blog Birthday Competition where one lucky reader can win a book from every month that the Blog has been running...
Email this
|
Technorati Links
|
Save to del.icio.us
|
Digg This!
|
Stumble It!
Permalink
|
Comments (0)
Posted by
John on June 06, 2008
A colleague recently encouraged me to read the Sci Fi classic Starship Troopers by Robert Heinlein. I've not read a whole lot of Sci Fi, but I enjoy it when I allow for the indulgence and this was no exception. The plotline is a bit slow, with several long passages about the necessity of self-sacrifice in a civil, democratic society, but these were not unpleasurable and I very much appreciated the force of Heinlein's argument...
Email this
|
Technorati Links
|
Save to del.icio.us
|
Digg This!
|
Stumble It!
Permalink
|
Comments (0)
Posted by
Mike on June 02, 2008
I love the Dambusters film. And this clip suggests that Peter Jackson is getting closer to filming a remake. Which could be great...like the Lord of the Rings. Or not so great - like King Kong. Fingers crossed he doesn't mess it up because he has a lot to live up to here...
Email this
|
Technorati Links
|
Save to del.icio.us
|
Digg This!
|
Stumble It!
Permalink
|
Comments (3)
Posted by
Phil on May 10, 2008
If the story of Icarus teaches us anything, it is that man was not meant to fly. However, one 48-year-old Swiss former fighter pilot has a different opinion. Yves Rossy unveiled his self-made rocket pack this Wednesday, and proceeded to leap from an aircraft over the Alps and fly at speeds of up to 186 miles per hour, before parachuting back to earth. This stunt was the culmination of five years of training, and was the first public demonstration, in front of the world's press, of his invention...
Email this
|
Technorati Links
|
Save to del.icio.us
|
Digg This!
|
Stumble It!
Permalink
|
Comments (0)