Incoming Resources
- The new Oxford book of war poetry, chosen and edited by Jon Stallworthy
- Why we fight, the roots of war and the paths to peace, Christopher Blattman
- Sex and war, how biology explains warfare and terrorism and offers a path to a safer world, Malcolm Potts and Thomas Hayden
- The rebel, an essay on man in revolt, Albert Camus ; with a foreword by Sir Herbert Read ; a revised and complete translation of L'Homme révolté by Anthony Bower
- Sex, bombs, and burgers, how war, pornography, and fast food have shaped modern technology, Peter Nowak
- The Atlantic and its enemies, a personal history of the Cold War, Norman Stone
- The end of victory culture, cold war America and the disillusioning of a generation, Tom Engelhardt
- The Great War, perspectives on the First World War, edited by Robert Cowley
- War is a force that gives us meaning, Chris Hedges
- 10 days to D-Day
- The hidden history of America at war, untold tales from Yorktown to Fallujah, Kenneth C. Davis
- Paying with their bodies, American war and the problem of the disabled veteran, John M. Kinder
- Deep violence, military violence, war play and the social life of weapons, Joanna Bourke
- The long shadow, the legacies of the Great War in the twentieth century, David Reynolds
- The Oxford illustrated history of modern war, edited by Charles Townshend
- The worth of war, Benjamin Ginsberg
- Nothing ever dies, Vietnam and the memory of war, Viet Thanh Nguyen
- Crossing the street in Hanoi, teaching and learning about Vietnam, Carol Wilder
- Christopher Hitchens and his critics, terror, Iraq, and the left, edited by Simon Cottee and Thomas Cushman ; with an afterword by Christopher Hitchens
- The hidden history of America at war, untold tales from Yorktown to Fallujah, Kenneth C. Davis
- Conflict, culture, and history, regional dimensions, by Stephen J. Blank [and others]
- Ten days to D-Day, citizens and soldiers on the eve of the invasion, David Stafford
- Regarding the pain of others, Susan Sontag
- Hell and good company, the Spanish Civil War and the world it made, Richard Rhodes
- Nothing Ever Dies, Vietnam and the Memory of War
- War and world history, Professor Jonathan P. Roth
- I wouldn't start from here, the 21st century and where it all went wrong, Andrew Mueller
- The dawn warriors ;, man's evolution toward peace, by Robert Bigelow
- War is a force that gives us meaning, Chris Hedges
- Christopher Hitchens and his critics, terror, Iraq, and the left, edited by Simon Cottee and Thomas Cushman ; with an afterword by Christopher Hitchens
- Ten days to D-Day, citizens and soldiers on the eve of the invasion, David Stafford
- Blood of revolution, from the Reign of Terror to the rise of Khomeini, Erik Durschmied
- Addicted to war, why the U.S. can't kick militarism, an illustrated exposé by Joel Andreas
- The Vietnam War in popular culture, the influence of America's most controversial war on everyday life, Ron Milam, editor ; foreword by George C. Herring
- War, how conflict shaped us, Margaret MacMillan
- Sex and world peace, Valerie M. Hudson [and others]
- War, how conflict shaped us, Margaret MacMillan
- Voices in wartime, a Two Careys production ; a Rick King film ; director, Rick King ; producers, Jonathan King, Rick King
- Aftermath, the remnants of war, Donovan Webster
- War and world history, Professor Jonathan P. Roth
- War nerd, Gary Brecher
- Later essays, under the sign of Saturn, AIDS and its metaphors, where the stress falls, regarding the pain of others, at the same time : essays and speeches, Susan Sontag ; David Rieff, editor
- Uncertain ground, citizenship in an age of endless, invisible war, Phil Klay
- The Cambridge illustrated history of warfare, the triumph of the West, edited by Geoffrey Parker
- India at war, the subcontinent and the Second World War, Yasmin Khan
- War and world history, Jonathan P. Roth, Parts 1-4
- War in 140 characters, how social media is reshaping conflict in the twenty-first century, David Patrikarakos